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  • Baahubali duology:
    • Bijjaladeva Other Appearances is the self-centered older son of Mahishmati's Emperor Somadeva. Abusing his subjects, Bijjaladeva regularly conducts torture and casually tries to rape a slave girl, leading to her suicide. His frequent bouts of cruelty making Somadeva pass him up for the throne, when his father and brother die, Bijjaladeva schemes to ensure his own son Bhallaladeva is named Emperor to rule as he desires. Feeding his son's hate, when Bijjaladeva's nephew Amandera Baahubali is made Crown Prince he frames Baahubali as a traitor to be exiled, later having him killed and wiping out his wife's kingdom. As advisor under Bhallaladeva, rebels are whipped to death and citizens are robbed to fund an ostentatious golden statue, and when it nearly falls while being erected, Bijjaladeva states he hopes the "sacrifice" of the hundreds stuck beneath will keep it intact.
    • The Beginning: Inkoshi is a chief of the Kaalakeya tribe known for murdering all the men and raping all the women in settlements he captures. Setting his sights on Mahishmati, Inkoshi later meets with Queen Mother Sivagami Devi, and swears to murder both of her prince sons before taking her as his personal Sex Slave. When Sivagami's sons launch a counterattack on his camp, Inkoshi has his men use captive Mahishmati citizens—including children—as Human Shields.
  • Baby Driver: Bats, real name Leon Jefferson III, is a member of Doc's robbery crew and an aggressive thug with a firm belief that Murder Is the Best Solution. Bats guns down or tries to gun down anyone who does—or doesn't—get in the way of his heists, from security guards to normal people who try to fight back, and in one case triggers a massacre against a friendly Arms Dealer and all of his men. When it's revealed the arms dealer and his men were undercover cops on Bats's own side, Bats lies and claims they shot first. Even willing to extend his murderous actions against people outside his job, Bats is heavily indicated to have murdered a gas store attendant because he didn't want to pay; nearly kills Baby's girlfriend, Debora, for the same reason at a diner; and even beats up Baby's handicapped foster father just to mock the kid.
  • Babylon (2022): James McKay is a deathly pale and creepily amiable mob boss who rules Hollywood's underworld. McKay oversees the "Blockhouse", a nightmarish club of depravity and debauchery where women fight each other to bloody defeat; "circus freaks" are kept in captivity and used for abuse and sex by the guests; and copious amounts of torture and animal cruelty go uninhibited. When Nellie LaRoy is unable to immediately pay her gambling debt to McKay, he threatens her with pouring acid on her genitals and then killing her. Though Nellie's friend Manny tries to pay McKay off, McKay discovers the money is fake, and responds by ordering Manny and two of his allies executed.
  • Babysitter Massacre: Mr. Walker is a Spree Killer who believes love gives him an excuse to commit atrocities. Possessing an unhealthy attraction towards Angela since he was young, he kidnaps and murders his own daughter to get closer to her. Years later, he begins torturing and killing those in his path to have Angela for himself, using various instruments to make his victims suffer, including boiling water and toxic gas. After massacring an entire room of partygoers, he takes Angela and her two friends, Arlene and Lucky, to their basement, informing them that they must bludgeon Lucky to death with a hammer if they want to survive. After Arlene takes Lucky's life, Walker strangles her anyway and cuts Angela's ankles to incapacitate her. When Angela stabs him in the stomach, he decides to burn himself with her after realizing that he was going to die.
  • Bad Boys (1995): Fouchet is a ruthless French gangster and drug dealer who steals millions of dollars worth of heroin from a police evidence locker by killing one of his own men whom he had dress as an officer as a distraction. When one of his contacts uses a portion of the stash to party with prostitutes, Fouchet has both the man and one of the women killed out of irritation. Making many attempts on the lives of Miami PD officers Marcus Burnett and Mike Lowrey and those close to them, Fouchet also has his chemistry team killed for delaying his schedule. When finally caught by the protagonists, Fouchet tries to force Mike to kill him, before making one final attempt on Mike's life out of spite when this fails.
  • Bacurau: Mayor Tony Jr. is a sleazy Corrupt Politician with connections to a group of foreign psychopaths interested in Hunting the Most Dangerous Game, selling out the titular small town of Bacurau to be their playground, including the innocent children. Only caring for his reelection, Tony is despised by everyone in Bacurau for his incompetence and immorality, not only supplying Bacurau with expired food and harmful medications, but also forcing a young prostitute to be his "payment". Abandoning the town after the killers arrive and granting them access to massacre its people, Tony cowardly tries to deny involvement instead of confessing to have made a deal with them.
  • Bad Dreams: Dr. Berrisford is a mild, unassuming man who runs a hospital for those with mental trauma. In reality, he is a sadist with a god complex and wishes to test his theories on suicide on his patients. Berrisford emotionally manipulates his mentally fragile patients to make them snap, resulting in them killing themselves and others. He has one leap out her window to the street, and has another throw her head into a turbine. One patient he leads to the roof to manipulate her into jumping off before the hero of the movie rescues her. Berrisford simply tries to push them off himself, after having mentally tortured said patient the entire film by planting the idea in her head that the ghost of a cult leader who'd tried to kill her was haunting her.
  • Bad Samaritan: Cale Erendreich is a wealthy sociopath who delights in breaking down his victims. Developing this philosophy after murdering his father's hired hand for rejecting him, Cale would abduct and torture women before tossing them into a pit laced with lye. When Sean Falco discovers his latest victim Katie Hopgood whilst searching his house, Cale slowly ruins his life, beginning with having him and his friend Derek fired from their jobs; uploading a risqué photo of Sean's girlfriend on Facebook and then brutally beating her; murdering Derek and his family to make it look like a murder-suicide; and forcing Sean to watch him shoot Katie into the lye pit, gleefully informing him that he'd bury him alive next to her after pinning his murders on him. Despite claiming to be motivated by correcting people, Cale is the embodiment of spite and pettiness.
  • Bad Times at the El Royale: Billy Lee is a sadistic and psychopathic cult leader who seduces abuse victim Rose Summerspring into becoming one of his devoted, fanatical followers. He instructs her to prove her loyalty by brutally, fatally stabbing an innocent doctor, who helps homeless people that Billy Lee looks to followers for, along with the doctor's wife. Billy Lee also has her and another girl in his cult fight and nearly kill each other in exchange for another sexual favor. When Billy Lee shows up at the El Royale to retrieve Rose, he takes her sister Emily, Father Daniel Flynn—really robber Donald "Doc" O’Kelly—singer Darlene Sweet and concierge and former Vietnam sniper Miles Miller all hostage and forces Emily and Miles to play roulette for their lives, coldly killing Emily when she loses. He also demands Darlene sing to avoid playing, and when she does, he puts her at risk anyway, callously claiming that he's "heard better". He then tries to kill Flynn when he gets free and fights back and after Miles kills Billy Lee, the still-brainwashed Rose mortally stabs Miles before she's shot dead herself.
  • Bait (2000): Bristol is a cold, calculating criminal who masterminds a robbery of the Federal Reserve, during which he executes two guards before being betrayed by his partner. Killing a truck driver for calling him crazy, Bristol tracks down and kills said partner's wife. When the Treasury Department uses lowly thief Alvin Sanders as bait to lure him out, Bristol stalks Alvin before kidnapping and strapping a Treasury agent to a bomb, killing said agent as a distraction while kidnapping Alvin. Bristol tortures Alvin to learn where the missing gold is before activating a bomb to kill a stadium of 5000 people and Alvin's family, including his 2-year-old son, just in case Alvin is lying to him about where the gold is.
  • Band of the Hand: Nestor is a slimy Miami drug lord and a consummate user and abuser. Angered that a group of teenagers named the "Band of the Hand" are cutting into his profits in their attempt to gentrify the Wretched Hive of a neighborhood he rules over, Nestor allows his homicidal right-hand-man Cream to try and slaughter them all, resulting in the death of their mentor Joe. Nestor also has a 16-year-old girl named Nikki under his thumb whom he pimps and rapes. He's so viciously possessive of Nikki that he stabs a knife through a mook's hand for looking at her, and when she flees his psychotic grip, Nestor encourages his minions to "do whatever you want with her" so long as she ends up dead by the end.
  • Barbarian: Frank, the original owner of the ramshackle Detroit home, posed as a maintenance man to gain access to victims. A vicious and sadistic rapist, Frank abducted numerous women and filmed himself raping them. After the children were born, Frank abused and even raped them as well, one violation leading to the birth of the monstrous "Mother", whose madness and deadliness Frank is responsible for in the present.
  • Barbarian Queen duology:
    • First film: Lord Arrakur and his army wipe out Amethea's village, along with at least one other village over the course of several days' raiding. He abducts the young men, forcing them to be gladiators in his arena ,and takes the women, including Amethea's younger sister, to be sex slaves. Arrakur allows his men to torture, rape and murder as they please. He captures Amethea and tortures her for information on the whereabouts of the rebels and tries to have her broken in anticipation of making her an obedient sex slave.
    • The Empress Strikes Back: Hofrax is King Arkanis's misogynistic right-hand man. Assisting his master in keeping an iron grip over the land, Hofrax allows his men to harm the villagers as they please. In charge of Arkanis's slave trade, Hofrax has many farmers captured and sold off across the land. After getting captured and humiliated by Princess Athalia, Hofrax masterminds a plan to lure her by executing innocent peasants in the town square, sadistically torturing Athalia once she's in his grasp, while also promising her that her rebel army will all die by his hand.
  • The Barbarians: Kadar is a ruthless warlord and tyrant who seeks to dominate all he can, running his domain with brutal slavery and murder to keep the people in line. Attacking the Ragnick tribe, Kadar massacres them and takes the leader Canary for a concubine, promising to not harm two boys in return. Kadar proceeds to have them enslaved, and beaten by a man in a specific helmet so that when he makes them gladiators 15 years later, they will face each other in the helmets so he can have the pleasure of watching them kill one another. When they escape, Kadar sets after them, attempting to kill them and the remaining Ragnicks.
  • The Barber (2002): Dexter Miles is a British Serial Killer who moves to the small Alaskan town of Revelstoke and uses it as his hunting grounds, setting up shop as the local barber. Miles kills and rapes a local woman named Lucy before killing her lover. Miles romances a local cook named Sally and later murders her as well. Miles starts hanging around with a third woman, whom he eventually kills as well. An FBI agent shows up in town and informs the sheriff that he has been tracking a serial killer—Miles—who has killed 49 people over the years. Miles frames the sheriff for his crimes and manipulates Lucy's husband Cecil into shooting the sheriff, by telling him Lucy had an affair with the sheriff. After the sheriff is killed, the Coroner does an autopsy on his body and discovers his prints do not match the finger prints on the murder victims. Miles bumps into the Coroner, deduces what he knows and kills him so he won't tell anyone, before moving to Phoenix to continue his murder spree.
  • The Barber (2014): Eugene Van Wingerdt, real name Francis Visser, is an elderly Serial Killer who buried 17 women alive years past and walked due to lack of evidence connecting him to the killings. Visser proceeded to torment the officer who brought him in until the man shot himself. When the man's son John, a cop himself, shown shows up, claiming to want to learn how to kill, Visser plays a game by pretending to be a helpless old man who was mistaken for horrible crimes. It is revealed Visser is lying, knows exactly who his young "protege" is and wants to destroy him as well. Visser murders his former employee when the man annoys him, tracks down and murders a prospective victim that John released and buries John's partner alive. When facing the prospect of being caught, Visser glories in the fame he is sure to receive and the notion that people will learn that anyone can be a monster, even the kindly old barber next door.
  • Barb Wire: Colonel Victor Pryzer, the vicious Dragon-in-Chief of the Congressional Directorate, is a man who uses his power to oppress and brutalize the citizens of the post-apocalyptic United States. Pryzer introduces himself sexually torturing a woman to death before clamping down on La Résistance, leading to dozens more massacred. Victor also tortures Barb's blind brother as well, leaving his body crucified as a cruel taunt. His ultimate goal is to procure the antidote to a virus that Pryzer and the Congressional Directorate intend to unleash upon everyone in the country they haven't conquered.
  • Baron Blood: Otto von Kleist was a sadistic Baron who personally tortured and killed many residents of the valley where his castle resided, believing that they were "necessary only for his convenience". Though cursed by a witch to die a painful death for his crimes, his great-grandson Peter Kleist inadvertently brings him back to life in the present day, and he begins killing once again. He murders 5 innocent people in a short period of time, including the man who had been renovating his castle, and in the guise of a wheelchair-bound millionaire named Alfred Becker, then buys up the property with the intention of resuming his tortures. After revealing his true nature, he drags Peter, his friend Eva and his uncle Karl down to the dungeons to be tortured and killed.
  • Basic Instinct: Catherine Tramell derives joy only from death-defying gambits, in which she manipulates and leads others to their deaths. Seducing her victims into falling in love with her, Catherine kills them when she grows bored and publishes novels inspired by her crimes, as a show of arrogance in what she can get away with. With a slew of bodies behind her, including her own parents, Catherine manipulates her girlfriend into getting herself killed in a jealous attack on Catherine's other lover, Nick Curran, before setting up her own acquaintance to be blamed for Catherine's murders and get killed by Nick. Given a court-ordered psychologist, Dr. Michael Glass, years later, Catherine mentally torments him and personally kills Glass's wife, manipulating Glass into killing a rival psychologist and framing him for both crimes, happily admitting to Glass that she loves and indulges in her own evil nature.
  • The Bat (1959): The BatLieutenant Andy Anderson—is a notorious killer who committed a slew of murders and other crimes before the movie starts. The Bat returns several months later to begin a new crime spree, breaking into The Oaks early in the film, returning to The Oaks after hearing rumors of stolen bank notes hidden in the mansion. When Mark Fleming, nephew of Oaks owner John Fleming, finds blueprints that lead to a hidden room where the stolen goods are, The Bat brutally murders him by slashing his throat. Later getting found trying to find the hidden room, he murders Oaks housekeeper Judy during his escape. After this, he attempts to fake his death by framing and murdering Dr. Wells and staging it as a suicide. When Dr. Wells finds him, they fight, with The Bat eventually killing Dr. Wells. Drugging a policeman assigned to The Oaks, Detective Davenport, and sets fire to The Oaks garage to draw the occupants out. When they confront The Bat, he kills Detective Davenport and prepares to murder the remaining three occupants, only to be stopped at the last minute.
  • Battal Gazi: Lord Igor Yanos from the second movie, Savulun Battal Gazi Geliyor (Look Out, Here Comes Battal Gazi!), is a power-hungry warlord who leads his army of lieutenants to invade the Anatolian steppes. Slaughtering entire villages and settlements and massacring the palace which is the home of the warrior Battal Gazi and his sister Maria, Igor Yanos had Battal Gazi's father King Hussein imprisoned while ordering his minions to gang-rape Maria before having her crucified alive. When Battal Gazi tries to save his father, Igor Yanos has Battal Gazi captured alive and ordered both father and son to be flogged, torturing Battal Gazi by dunking his head in a vat of scorpions while Hussein is Forced to Watch. When Battal Gazi managed to escape thanks to an ambush from La Résistance, Igor Yanos reacts by having the captured resistance members executed, forcing Battal Gazi to surrender in exchange for his father's life, then orders his soldiers to continue beating Battal Gazi as he tries to embrace his father. When the final battle starts and his army is losing, Igor Yanos reveals his true nature as a Dirty Coward and abandons his men, as well as killing his lady advisor for getting in his way as he flees.
  • Battle Beyond the Stars: Sador of the Malmori is the leader of a crew of vicious mutants that roam the galaxy in their large battleship, subjugating any planet he pleases. If the planet's residents attempt to rebel against him, Sador destroys the planet via the use of a weapon called the Stellar Converter. Prior to the events of the film, Sador wiped out Caymen's entire species, leaving him the sole survivor. During the events of the film, Sador invades the peaceful planet of Akir, threatening its residents, the Akira, with destruction unless they submit to him, and having his men slaughter the Akira at random as a demonstration. After the Akira recruit mercenaries from across the galaxy for protection, Sador launches an invasion on the planet, intending to wipe out the Akira in retaliation for their defiance.
  • Battlefield Earth: Terl is the Psychlo head of security on Earth. Running inhumane camps where "Man-Animals" are enslaved, brutalized, and exterminated, Terl holds to hope he can destroy Earth in leaving it to return to Psychlo. Thanks to his indiscretions destroying his hopes of advancement and fleeing Earth, Terl initiates a scheme to force the hero Jonnie to mine illegal gold for him to bribe his way home. Planning on liquidating his workers after constantly lording his supremacy over humans, Terl later tries to have them killed and even attempts to detonate an explosive collar on Jonnie's girlfriend out of spite.
  • Battle Girl: The Living Dead in Tokyo Bay (1991): Captain Masao Fujioka is a delusional Japan nationalist willing to go to great lengths to protect his country's powerful reputation. After an asteroid hits the Tokyo Bay, Fujioka storms a laboratory with his men and threatens the scientists with execution should they not turn the power on for his electric barrier, killing one who gets too close. After the zombies infest the area, Fujioka forms the Human Hunter unit, a squad of soldiers who roam Tokyo killing both zombies and survivors. Hearing that Captain Kikihara is transferring infected refugees away for safety, Fujioka plans to send his unit to murder the infected survivors to protect Japan's image. Forming a Plan B should he fail, Fujioka captures soldiers and refugees to be tortured and injected with high doses of cosmo-amphetamine to turn them into loyal zombies for his undead army. With his army, Fujioka hopes to start a war against the entire world, where he'll win the battle and rule over a more powerful Japan.
  • The Battle of Canudos (1997): Colonel Antônio Moreira César, nicknamed the Head Ripper for his habit of decapitating enemies, is a fearless yet loud and abrasive officer of the Republican Army. Assigned to lead a third expedition to Belo Monte and take over the town to contain the influence of Antônio Conselheiro, Moreira not only declares his intention to parade with Conselheiro inside a cage but also boasts to have killed more than a hundred people in a revolt during a conversation with a lieutenant. Refusing to prepare the men under his command for the upcoming confrontation just to satisfy his need for battle and glory, Moreira sends countless soldiers to their deaths but not before suggesting that they kill the Conselheiristas by stabbing them to death with their bayonets; one group of soldiers were killed simply because they stopped fighting to eat and drink. When Moreira is fatally shot and put on his deathbed, another high-ranking officer pleads for him to retreat his forces, only for Moreira to threaten to execute all of those who refuse to fight for him, an idea which disgusted a soldier to the point of accusing Moreira of formulating a Taking You with Me on his own brigade.
  • Battle Rats (1989): Commander Van Dram is a VC general with an unhealthy fixation on torture, including a penchant for gouging out eyes. Van Dram has captured more American squads than any other VC soldier, utilizing the tunnels to drag off soldiers to his lair so he can torture them to death. Van Dram orders villages killed simply so they can't support the American soldiers and, when he captures the commanding officer of the "tunnel rats", Van Dram tortures him so badly the once-hardy man can only beg for death when he's found.
  • Battle Royale: Kazuo Kiriyama from The Film of the Book stands in contrast to his emotionless counterpart from the book and manga versions. Kiriyama in the film is a ruthless and psychopathic Blood Knight who voluntarily signed up for 'The Program' to be able to hunt down teenagers for fun. Throughout the film, Kiriyama wracks up the highest kill count, not caring if his victims are helpless or not, and after gunning down one girl, he uses a megaphone so everyone around can hear her pain and his execution of her. While he never speaks a word, his Slasher Smile throughout the film speaks volumes for how much he is relishing his murder of everyone around him.
  • The Battleship Island:
    • Yoon Hak-chul is a former Korean resistance fighter who defected to Imperial Japan and became an informant for them on Hashima Island. Gaining the trust of the other Korean laborers, he informs the Japanese guards of any escape plans and manipulates the deaths of numerous escapees, while embezzling their compensation pay and the withheld wages of other laborers. When his treachery is exposed by Park Mook-young, Yoon tries to kill him and later shoots a witness to the scene, Ko Choong-ho. Learning of an imminent Japanese defeat in World War II, he works with Yamada to kill every Korean laborer in exchange for safe passage out of Hashima Island, trying to manipulate every Korean, including the women and children, to enter into the coal mines so that they could be Buried Alive.
    • Shimazaki Daisuke is the manager of Hashima Island, responsible for enslaving the men into working under harsh conditions in the coal mines, where they are often starved and subjected to work accidents that result in their deaths. As for the women, Daisuke converts them into comfort women and sells them into sexual slavery, in which they are beaten and raped by their new husbands. When Daisuke learns of a gas explosion in Mine No. 2, he orders it to be sealed off to prevent further damage to the rest of the complex, even though there are many Korean laborers still stuck in the mine.
    • Yamada is the right-hand man of Shimazaki Daisuke, who enjoys tormenting the Korean laborers under his control, such as drowning two escapees in order to get a higher payment. Realizing that Japan will likely surrender to the United States, Yamada concocts a plan to wipe out all evidence of the war crimes committed on Hashima Island, including the massacre of every Korean laborer, in which he murders Daisuke to usurp his position. Heavily implied to have ordered the murder of a Japanese schoolgirl, he exploits the situation to justify his crackdown on the laborers and has Choi Chil-sung, accused of being the murderer, tortured as punishment. When the Koreans attempt to escape the island, he leads his forces to attack them, ordering his men to kill every Korean, even the ones who are aiding the Japanese.
  • Beauty and the Beast (2009): Lady Helen is responsible for cursing the Beast in infancy to spite his father, King Maxililian, for spurning her. In the present, Helen summons a troll and sets it loose to terrorize and slaughter villagers, including Belle's mother, as part of a bid to take power. Learning the Beast is the cursed prince, Helen frames him for the killings and attempts to have him executed, trying to kill Belle when she intervenes.
  • Beneath Still Waters (2005): Mordecai Salas, leader of a club of affluent citizens, delved into the dark arts to increase his own power before turning Marienbad into a hellish epicenter of depravity, murder and violence, enhanced by Human Sacrifice, particularly of children. Finally stopped by the heroic Mayor Borgia, Salas and his followers were locked away until two curious children accidentally happened upon him. Salas, upon being freed, tore one boy's head apart to devour the insides to recover his strength. In the present, Salas seeks to free Marienbad from its sunken grave by destroying the dam Mayor Borgia erected to bury the town beneath the waters and spread its influence over the world, so all of humanity consumes itself.
  • Beast with a Gun (aka Mad Dog Killer) (1977): The vicious Nanni Vitali is a murderer escaping from prison who beats, tortures and kills guards, pummels a gas station attendant and his son and is happy to murder whoever crosses his path. Tracking down the man who betrayed him, Vitali rapes his girlfriend Giuliana and proceeds to beat him to a pulp before dousing him with quicklime and burying him alive. Plotting on a big score, Vitali continues sexually coercing Giuliana while on the run from heroic Inspector Santini. Taking a bank hostage, Vitali executes an old woman hostage and flees, trying to murder Giuliana for her "betrayal", and later taking Santini's father and sister hostage, murdering two cops on the road. Using said sister as a hostage, Vitali tortures her with a straight razor to show he's serious, being no better than the mad dog killer everyone claims him to be.
  • The Beastmaster trilogy:
    • First movie: Maax was the High Priest of Aruk prior to being banished by King Zed, who learned Maax was planning to sacrifice Zed's unborn son. In retaliation, Maax ordered his witch servants to magically extract the infant from his mother's womb and kill him anyways. The unfortunate queen is killed and the infant prince, Dar, only survives because local villagers rescued him. Years later, Maax led the Juns in conquering Aruk, blinding and imprisoning Zed. Maax presides over brutal oppression of the kingdom, regularly sacrificing children to his god, Ar. He wipes out Dar's village, leading him into conflict with Dar himself. When Dar enters Maax's prison to free Zed, he discovers that Maax has innocent people tortured and transformed into mindless beasts to serve as his guards. Maax later attempts to have Zed, his young son, and his cousin Kiri sacrificed to Ar. He then taunts Zed by revealing Dar is his son before killing him.
    • Through the Portal of Time (1991): Arklon is Dar's evil half-brother who seeks to extend his reign over the land of Arok. Having enslaved the people of Arok after King Zed's death, Arklon has Dar sentenced to death for trying to stop him. Teaming up with the sorceress Lyranna to steal a Neutron Bomb from L.A., Arklon plans to use it to destroy those who oppose him. Causing havoc in L.A., even mind raping a soldier for a way into the military base, Arklon abandons Lyranna for thinking about betraying him, and when up against Dar for a final battle, attempts to detonate the bomb then and there, uncaring that it'll kill himself and countless others.
    • The Eye of Braxus (1997): Lord Argon is the frail, sorcerous tyrant of Ambeth who seeks the Eye of Braxus to gain immortality and Braxus's strength. Having innocents sentenced to his dungeon, Argon often absorbs their life essence into himself, the younger the better, while forcing others to act as his soldiers. Finding out that the Eye is in King Thal's hands, Argon has his men raid Thal's village, killing countless lives before kidnapping Thal and torturing him for days. With Dar in his grasp, he leaves him hanging over a pit of lava and attempts to use his friend Bey as one final sacrifice before gaining the power of Braxus.
  • Beasts of No Nation: The Commandant is a commander of a rebel battalion fighting in a civil war in an unnamed African country, and has no qualms about using children to achieve his aims. When Agu, a 12-year-old boy, sees his father and brother killed by government forces, he runs off into the jungle. The Commandant finds Agu and forces him to join his battalion, in which he has several Child Soldiers. The Commandant puts Agu and other children through harsh training before being allowed on the battlefield; any child who fails this training is killed. The Commandant forces Agu to kill an unarmed man to prove his loyalty to the battalion. Later in the film, the Commandant rapes Agu; it is heavily implied he has raped other children under his command. When attacking a town, the Commandant's battalion commits many atrocities, including mass murder and rape. When the leader of the rebel group demotes the Commandant and has his lieutenant promoted as leader of the battalion, the Commandant has the lieutenant killed. The Commandant then leads his battalion in an attack against the rest of the rebel group, willing to throw the lives of his men in a pointless suicide mission, just for the sake of his pride.
  • Beauty Investigator: David Chun is a nightclub manager and Triad member who moonlights as a serial murderer and rapist. A sexual sadist who's working with his boss Billy Tan on wiping out the Yakuza on his turf, Chun on his off time prefers luring in hookers and hostesses to his house to be tortured, murdered, and raped. With three victims to his name, Chun sets out to make Grace his fourth.
  • Becky: Dominick is a merciless, soft-spoken Neo-Nazi who seeks a mysterious key that will help him change the world to one where white supremacy reigns. Orchestrating a prison breakout by killing two prisoners and his security guards, Dominick flags down a passing car, beats the driver to death, and orders Apex to kill the two screaming children inside so as to steal the vehicle. With his thugs in tow, Dominick invades a lake house and takes the family inside hostage, torturing and killing the father Jeff to coerce his teenage daughter Becky into handing over the sought-after key. When Becky fights back and begins picking off his goons, Dominick violently targets Jeff's girlfriend Kayla and her son Ty, shooting the woman in the leg and nearly throttling her son in front of her. Dominick ultimately tries to kill Becky and the others even after getting what he wants, shooting the loyal Apex for getting in his way and trying to save the family.
  • Bedlam: George Sims, the master of Bedlam House, is a ruthless, greedy man who runs the asylum with an iron fist. Manipulating the political system to have any rivals thrown into the madhouse, Sims rigs the window outside their cells so that when they try to escape, they inevitably fall to their deaths. Starving, beating and torturing inmates, Sims has a young woman thrown into Bedlam when she attempts to have the inmates treated better. Sims frequently attempts to break her faith in humanity and tries to have her thrown in a cell with a murderous inmate. When he learns she is going to testify before a parole board, Sims attempts to force her to take a "solution" that will leave her dead or insane.
  • Behind Enemy Lines: General Miroslav Lokar is the warmongering commander of the Serb Volunteer Guard paramilitary unit, secretly orchestrating a series of genocidal killings against Bosniaks, including children, in southern Bosnia and burying the bodies in a mass grave at the hills. Destroying the jet of Chris Burnett and Jeremy Stackhouse when they accidentally photograph evidence of his crimes, Lokar executes the latter and sends his two Co-Dragons on a mission to hunt for Burnett. Leading an attack against the guerrillas who opposed him, Lokar kills even more people and allows his soldiers to casually massacre surrendering troops.
  • The Believers: Palo is a practitioner and shaman of a malevolent version of brujería (witchcraft) of the Santería religion. Spreading his influence into New York, Palo corrupts many of the city's rich and powerful into the sacrificial murder of their own children for more power, and gains a large following. When Tom Lopez, a cop infiltrating the cult, discovers the truth, Palo uses his dark magic to drive him mad with paranoia and later suicide; he also torments Lieutenant McTaggert into eventually killing himself when he too discovers the truth. The cult plans to initiate Cal Jamison by having him sacrifice his son Chris, with Palo hospitalizing Cal's girlfriend Jessica by putting spider eggs in her makeup, causing spiders to crawl out of a blister on her face. When Palo's supposed surrogate mother comes to her senses and attempts to warn Cal, Palo murders her too. When Cal defies the cult to save his son, Palo murders Cal's friend Marty in the ensuing chase, before trying to kill Cal himself.
  • Belzebuth: Belzebuth is none other than Satan himself. Hellbent on cementing his reign over the Earth, he does everything in his power to ensure that the Second Coming never reaches fruition. A thousand years after the death of Jesus, he engineered the First Crusade, causing thousands of deaths, including that of the new Christ child. Nearly another millennium later, Belzebuth started possessing hosts to kill large groups of children and then themselves, with newborn babies among these children, and demanding child sacrifices in exchange for backing out of pacts made with him. He possesses Detective Emmanuel Ritter after luring him into his grasp with the promise of returning his wife and child to him, and uses Ritter to carry out more chaos and violence with the aim of murdering Isa, the reincarnation of Christ.
  • The Berlin File (2013): Dong Myung-so is a North Korean agent and "fixer" out to deal with the disaster of an arms deal gone wrong. Myung-so turns out to have no loyalty to his own government, arranging terrorist deals with his father to enrich himself and betraying North Korea. Centering on another agent to frame him, Myung-so tortures and murders his way through other agents and targets, using his signature poison pen to inflict agonizing deaths on many of them.
  • Better Watch Out: Luke Lerner is a sociopathic pre-teen who wants to seduce his babysitter, Ashley. To impress Ashley, Luke stages a home invasion with his friend Garrett. When Ashley finds out it was faked, Luke ties her up, sexually assaults her in a game of truth or dare, and calls her boyfriend, Ricky, to come over. Luke knocks Ricky out and ties him up, and proceeds to torment him and Ashley before calling her ex, Jeremy. Luke hits Ricky in the face with a paint can from the balcony, causing his head to explode, to Luke's sick glee. Jeremy arrives, and Luke goads him into writing an apology to Ashley before lynching him with the rope on the swing. Luke murders Garrett for trying to free Ashley, before stabbing her in the neck and framing Jeremy for his crimes. Upon discovering Ashley survived, Luke plans on "visiting" her at the hospital to finish her off.
  • Beverly Hills Cop III: Ellis DeWald is a former cop turned head of security of the Wonder World theme park, using it as a means to hide his counterfeit money operation, murdering the theme park's designer once the latter starts learning of his illegal operation. Ellis starts by ordering his men to kill every mechanic in a chop shop and murders the boss of Axel Foley. When one of his goons gets shot during a car chase, Ellis does nothing but kick him off the van to be run over by a car and killed. Ellis shows no concerns when endangering the lives of children and families, such as when he sends his men to kill Axel by sabotaging a theme park ride that nearly has two children killed. Near the climax of the film, Ellis holds the protagonist's Love Interest hostage and threatens to kill her unless Axel gives him the paper they use to print the counterfeit money, but plans to kill them either way.
  • Beyond Darkness (1990): Bette is a Satanic servant of the demon Ameth who killed ten children and devoured their souls to deliver them to hell. After her execution, Bette begins haunting the family of a minister, intending on delivering their children to hell as well. Bette begins to corrupt the boy of the family, tormenting the family regularly while trying to possess them, enslaving the spirits of women executed as witches to do her work. Later causing the death of her enemy, a former priest, Bette attempts to force the father to sacrifice his own son to her master Ameth.
  • Beyond the Door III (1989): Professor Andromelek is a Satanist who uses dark powers to have the heroine Beverly Putnic's mother murdered. Using his magic, he proceeds to kill everyone in the cast, using horrific means such as having some torn apart or burnt alive by a possessed train. Andromelek ultimate intends to offer Beverly to Satan as a Virgin Sacrifice to summon the Devil.
  • Beyond the Mask (2015): Charles Kemp is a British businessman and member of the East India Company, leading the group in several atrocities like slavery and murder. When his protégé William Reynolds, tries to settle down for a peaceful life, Kemp tries to murder him to keep him quiet, and frames him for many murders and riots sparked by Kemp himself. Kemp plans to disrupt the 13 colonies of a young America by bombing Philadelphia during the signing of the Declaration of Independence, killing hundreds of people so he can swoop in and take over the colonies in the ensuing chaos, and tries to murder his own niece Charlotte Holloway when she discovers his plans.
  • Bhakshak (2024):
    • Bansi Sahu is the owner and self-proclaimed master of the girls' shelter home in Munawwarpur, whose friendly charisma hides a sadistic pervert. Bansi has the 40 girls in his shelter drugged, stripped, abused, and raped by himself and his workers, killing several of them when they fight back or get pregnant, laughing while planning to have one girl kill another for her freedom, only to deny it to her. Using his extensive connections up to the Minister of India to suppress any police and get rid of potential threats, Bansi hosts parties where girls are forced to dance for him and his connections, with Sudha almost being a victim herself. When Vaishali Singh investigates the rumors around the shelter home, Bansi intimidates her and threatens her family, beating her brother-in-law when suspecting the latter to have taken legal action against him.
    • Pappu Thekedar is a sadistic member of Bansi's group who takes extreme joy out of deflowering the young girls. When one of the girls fought back against him, he shoved chili powder up her private parts, laughing sadistically at her torturous pain. His actions and behavior manage to disgust even the other members of Bansi's group.
  • Big Bad Wolf: Mitch Toblat is a werewolf who can retain his mind and talk, but he is also a vicious, sadistic sociopath. At the start of the film, Mitch kills Derek Crowley's father in front of Derek's uncle Charlie, before marrying Derek's mother and emotionally abusing Derek for years. When Derek and his friends decide to go on a trip to Mitch's personal cabin, Mitch interrupts their fun as a werewolf by killing all but Derek and his Love Interest Samantha; in said massacre, he rapes and kills a virgin in front of her boyfriend, taunts said boyfriend, and fatally castrates him. Later, he blames Derek for bringing his friends to the cabin in the first place. When Derek, Sam and Charlie are investigating Mitch and looking for DNA evidence, he catches Sam in his room and forces her to perform oral sex on him. When he discovers they were investigating him, Mitch abducts, tortures and kills Charlie, telling him it's his own fault for not minding his business. After that, he abducts Sam and takes her to his cabin, intending to lure Derek to him. The plan is sidetracked when another group of teenagers come to investigate the previous massacre, but he kills them as well and rapes a girl in their group. He then attempts to kill Derek and Sam in a fight, and just before he is killed, he bites Derek so that the latter will be cursed.
  • The Big Bird Cage (1972): Warden Zappa is the cruel leader of an all-female prison camp, where the women are forced to serve as labor for his sugar plantation. If one of the women were to escape, misbehave, or be revealed as an informer, they would be sent to the Bird Cage, a giant mechanism where most of them die from work-related accidents. The ones who are driven insane by their work labor are taken to the Mad House and abused by the guards. Hanging an escaped woman by her ponytail for a day and later torturing Blossom for Django’s whereabouts, Zappa has his men gun down every escaping woman once a prison break occurs.
  • The Big Boss: Hsiao Mi, the titular Big Boss, is a brutal factory owner who uses his factory as a drug smuggling operation. When his workers uncover the drugs, Hsiao Mi has them murdered and later kills their cousins when they try to investigate what happened. Having a riot brutally suppressed, he corrupts the hero Cheng with alcohol and women before deciding Cheng can't be trusted, having Cheng's lover killed and then having his entire family slaughtered before trying to kill Cheng in a personal duel.
  • Big Bullet:
    • The Professor is a terrorist mastermind and ruthless killing machine who escapes police custody and intends to rob Interpol's Hong Kong vault as retaliation. His first onscreen kill involves shoving a policeman face-first into the wire divider of his prison transport, killing him with a massive dose of Facial Horror. After arranging for the public assassination of the police Superintendent responsible for his arrest, the Professor then initiates a massive shootout outside a crowded restaurant that spills into the streets with policemen and civilians alike shot, culminating in the Professor blowing up a water truck in a crowded public square. Not satisfied with the deaths of over thirty people in a day, the Professor then have his operatives loot Interpol's vault while killing everyone in the building, before taking on Sergeant Bill Chu and his team of officers in a car chase, with the Professor shooting bystanders along the way including a random passing traffic cop not involved in the shootout. Hijacking a military plane after killing everyone aboard, the Professor attempts to flee with the money while threatening to torture and kill Sergeant Bill for getting into his way, and later tries to have Bill flung under the wheels of the plane.
    • The Bird is a Blood Knight who enjoys killing, frequently cackling in glee at the sight of death and taking great pleasure in his executions. Besides shotgunning policemen from up close, the Bird also shoots a woman in her forehead at point-blank range for crying, and personally leads the Professor's operatives in gunning down bystanders. After the terrorist who works as their getaway driver is shot, the Bird callously throws his subordinate out his vehicle while driving through the streets, running over bystanders and policemen without batting an eye. In the finale where the Professor and Bird hijacks a military plane by killing everyone on board, the Bird takes pleasure beating up Sergeant Bill's protégé Jeff, intending to kill him slowly and painfully. Of all the operatives in the Professor's team, the Bird is unquestionably the most ruthless and sadistic of all.
  • The Big Combo (1955): Mr. Brown is a sadistic mobster who rose to power by murdering his boss before locking the only witness, his own wife, in an insane asylum to be forgotten. Torturing the hero Inspector Diamond, Brown shows himself willing to murder anyone in his path or betray whoever he needs to. Manipulating his girlfriend Susan's mental problems, Brown later kills his right-hand man McClure upon his betrayal before trying to kill his own loyal henchmen and then kills Diamond's own partner before trying to abduct Susan and flee.
  • The Big Doll House: Lucian is the sexually sadistic chief guard of a women's prison. After subjecting every new inmate to a painful cavity search, Lucian spends her days looking for any excuse to drag one to her torture chamber, inflicting such heinous tortures that at least one has died. She ends up whipping one prisoner bloody and electrocuting another to near-death, so they plot an escape with their cellmates which involves getting themselves punished. Lucian learns of the plan by withholding a cellmate's heroin, denying it anyways, and letting her suffer withdrawals when her girlfriend's information isn't satisfactory. Locking the girls in a hot box, she takes one and threatens her with a venomous snake to get her to talk.
  • The Big Easy: Detective Sergeant Andre DeSoto is a crooked police officer working with his partner and superior to flood the streets with heroin. To cover themselves, DeSoto commits murders of gangsters and criminals, framing differing gangs to provoke a Mob War, allowing them to dominate the heroin trade. When his boss, Captain Jack Kellom, decides to back away from criminality, DeSoto callously shoots him and leaves him to painfully bleed out.
  • Big Game:
    • Agent Morris is a corrupt Secret Service agent worse than even the callous terrorist Hazar. Disgusted at the weakness of President William Alan Moore after once having taken a bullet for him, Morris arranges the attack on Air Force One to kill everyone aboard and sabotages his fellow agents' parachutes to kill them. Executing several of his own allies to prove a point, Morris locates Moore and delights in savagely beating him down before handing him to Hazar to be stuffed and mounted. Morris later attempts to murder Moore himself, along with the young Oskari, who's been helping Moore.
    • The Vice President, and CIA hardliner Fred Herbert, are the secret masterminds of the plot so the former can rise to power and the latter can force America to the "strength" he feels it needs. Arranging for Hazar, Herbert's best agent, to attack in collaboration with Morris, the two intend for no survivors and to make Moore into a martyr to justify a new campaign in The War on Terror. Upon the failure of the plan, Herbert smoothly executes the Vice President to prevent any trace from getting back to him.
  • The Big Heat: Vince Stone is The Dragon to gangster Mike Lagana. Stone is also far crueler and more vicious than his business-minded boss is. When a cop ends up dead and the cop's girlfriend looks like she may talk, Stone kidnaps her and tortures her to death. When homicide investigator Bannion, first meets Stone at a nightclub, Stone is punishing a dancer by burning her with a cigarette. When Stone thinks his girlfriend, Debby Marsh, has been meeting with Bannion, he disfigures her with hot coffee and throws her out on the streets. He later attempts to kidnap Bannion's young daughter and carries out the murder of another member of the organization. When Marsh confronts him later and repays the favor by throwing boiling coffee at him, Stone mortally wounds her with a gunshot, giving Bannion a murder to finally pin on him.
  • The Big Heat (1988): Ching Han is a ruthless drug smuggler who introduces himself burning alive a Dirty Cop who tried blackmailing him. When said cop's friends investigate the murder and catch Han's partner, Han has his men invade and shoot up a hospital to kill said partner, who Han was also blackmailing with photos of him having a homosexual affair. He has the hero Wong's girlfriend murdered and leaves a bomb by her corpse to kill the police. Later torturing one of the cops, Han sets a trap to kill his friends as well, planning to continue his business no matter who he has to kill.
  • Big Tits Zombie: Maria at first seems to be simply an annoying snob, but is revealed to be something much worse. After accidentally unleashing the Zombie Apocalypse, she focuses on nothing more than saving her own hide, culminating in leaving her coworkers to be Eaten Alive while she takes the keys and runs. During her escape, Maria learns she can command the dead to do her bidding. Enjoying the power, she decides to create a kingdom of the dead on the ashes of the old world. After revealing this to Rena and Genko, she orders them killed, eventually leading to Genko being zombified. After Genko turns enough to be controlled, Maria orders her to shoot her newfound friend Rena before trying to drop the latter in a portal to Hell when that fails.
  • Bingo Hell (2021): Mr. Big, owner of the Bingo Hall, sets up shop in Oak Springs as he has many small towns. Once there, he lures in his victims with promises of wealth, killing them horribly to claim their souls. This is the fate that befalls numerous residents of Oak Springs, Mr. Big planning on killing everyone he can in the town before moving on to the next.
  • Bit: Vlad Manfred Castaneta, all but directly stated to be Dracula himself, was a powerful vampire master and Duke's former tormentor. Appearing to Duke as a dashing playboy, Vlad took Duke into his harem where he stripped her of her free will, along with several other women; this process had them completely aware of what they were doing but unable to do anything about it, as they were sexually exploited for decades. Duke eventually overpowered and seemingly destroyed Vlad when his hold became weak, and was warped by her experience into a ruthless vampire mistress herself. Kept alive through his still-beating heart, Vlad still has enough power to brainwash vampire hunters into going after Duke's group, having some killed when they outlive their usefulness. Restored by his only loyal bride, Vlad immediately drained her of blood and tossed her aside, before ripping out Duke's heart, accusing her of being ungrateful for all the things he's done for her.

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  • Black and Blue (2019): Terry Malone and his subordinate, Smitty, are a pair of corrupt narcotics officers who secretly run a city-wide outfit of abusive law enforcement agents. Through their network, they head up countless extortions and fabrications of evidence, as well as covering up Police Brutality. When their corruption is close to being exposed, Malone and Smitty begin tying up loose ends, killing a group of young, unarmed drug dealers so as to frame a rival gang for the slaying and initiate a street war that will wipe out connections to them. When rookie officer West accidentally catches the triple execution on film, Malone frames her as the murderer and sics cops and gangsters on her to kill her. Malone leads a police squad to ambush and kill Darius's entire gang when Darius learns the truth of the murders, while Smitty kills one of their allies out of petty spite. Smitty then guns another innocent cop down just for standing in his way.
  • The Black Belly of the Tarantula: The masseur is a man who, after murdering his wife, learned that he can only get sexual gratification from murdering women. He takes a low level job at a health spa where he fakes being blind, which lets him manipulate the models he interacts with into letting him molest them and pull mean tricks on them, which are handwaved by the women around him as him being blind and as such, not responsible for his actions. After this gets boring for him, he decides to start murdering the clients in the spa. To do so, he takes an acupuncture needle and paralyzes them. Fully conscious but unable to move or speak, the women are then Forced to Watch their own murders. After Inspector Tellini starts investigating his crimes, The masseur begins stalking him and his wife. He eventually ends up slaying his boss and almost killing Tellini's wife before being arrested.
  • Black Book:
    • Gunther Franken is a swaggering SS officer who leaks knowledge of an "escape route" to Dutch Jews. In truth this is a trap for Franken to ambush them, murder them, and steal their valuables for himself despite this personal enrichment being punishable by death under the Reich. Conducting brutal tortures and murders against the resistance, Franken later betrays his more lenient superior Muntze to set him up for execution and flee with his stolen valuables.
    • Dr. Hans Akkermans is a corrupt member of the Dutch Resistance who is secretly working for the Nazis. Through a ruse conducted as an escape to freedom, he and Van Gein secure safe passage for Jews, resistance fighters, anti-Nazis, and just plain unfortunate people into neutral or Allied territory. Shortly after leaving the dock, the boats are machine-gunned by a Nazi patrol, their bodies looted, and the spoils divided between the conspirators. Akkermans begins to kill off the conspirators, at first appearing to have had a heroic attack of conscience, only to later reveal he just didn't wish to share the wealth. Later on, he tries to kill Rachel Stein to silence her knowledge of the goings-on and hold onto his status as a war hero. He seems caring and respectable, but it all was act which got innumerable amounts of people killed solely so he could steal their heirlooms and melt them or sell them.
  • Black Butler: Lady Hanae Wakatsuki is the Evil Aunt of Shiori "Kiyoharu" Genpō, who became an Immortality Seeker after being rejected by Shiori's father for being infertile. She ends up joining with pharmaceutical executive Shimpei Kujo to experiment on young women obtained via Human Trafficking to develop various anti-aging drugs, eventually killing Shiori's parents when they get in her way. During one of these experiments, the two discover a drug called Necrosis which agonizingly mummifies people. Hanae decides to test this drug on random people, including a nightclub full of people, her murders soon being nicknamed the Devil's Curse. After killing Kujo for outliving his usefulness, Hanae sets up a bunch of Necrosis pills to bomb a mass gathering of world leaders, intending to mummify everybody in a kilometer's radius.
  • The Black Castle (1952): Count Carl von Bruno set himself up as a god to a tribe in Africa for riches and power. Murdering some of the soldiers who helped expose him, von Bruno lives a lavish life with his neglected wife Elga who he married after murdering his first wife. When hero Sir Ronald Burton, alias Richard Beckett, arrives to expose von Bruno for murdering his friends and romances the lonely Elga, von Bruno tries to murder Elga by feeding her to his crocodiles, and kills a friend of Beckett's and his own old servant for helping the lovers before trying to bury them alive.
  • The Black Cat: Hjalmar Poelzig is a depraved Satanist who plumbed depths almost unheard of in 1930s horror cinema. Having served in World War I, Poelzig betrayed his comrades to have them slaughtered and condemned the survivors to torturous death camps, including his closest friend Vitus Werdegast. Seducing and marrying Vitus's wife, Poelzig murdered her and kept her preserved corpse—before marrying the daughter of her and Vitus when said daughter was of age. Running a Satanic cult, Poelzig captures hapless travelers and sacrifices them to his master, intending to sacrifice the female lead of the film. Finally, Poelzig murders his current wife, adding her preserved corpse to his macabre collection.
  • Black Christmas (2019): Professor Gelson is a misogynist who, upon discovering the bust of Calvin Hawthorn contains Hawthorn's malevolent will, uses it to brainwash frat pledges and sends them out to murder "unruly" women. Killing several women across campus, Gelson intends to have the frat dominate political institutions with any women who resist the new way of things to be disposed of. Trying to have the heroines murdered, Gelson promptly has a sorority collaborator killed despite her attempts to be "good" for them.
  • The Blackcoat's Daughter: The demon who haunts Katherine is a malicious spirit seeking to corrupt her into an agent of Satan. Tormenting Kat with visions of her parents dying at the demon's hands, the demon murders her parents and begins ordering her to kill everyone at her all-girls Catholic school. During an isolating winter break, the demon finally manages to possess Kat and use her to horribly butcher the school nurses and a fellow classmate, then attack a responding officer. Though the demon is exorcised from the girl soon after, its darkness drives Kat to kill more people in its name.
  • The Black Cobra: The unnamed head of a biker gang leads said gang as they rape and murder their way through the local area for fun. When a woman photographs him after witnessing him and his gang killing someone, he decides to kill her and steal the pictures, butchering anyone who gets in his way. To infiltrate the hospital that the photographer is staying in, he murders a man by dragging him down the road with his motorcycle, smearing the victim's blood on one of his minions afterward to make him appear injured. Even after learning that the photos are useless due to the flashbulb being too close, he decides to continue his assault anyway, and kidnaps the police chief's daughter. When the film's heroes attack the gang to rescue her, he abandons his men to be captured or killed.
  • Black Cougar: Mayor Creeps moonlights as a crime boss who has dozens of neighborhood children kidnapped. Selling these kids as slaves to various clientele, Creeps also has anybody who witnesses the kidnappings killed, children included.
  • Black Dawn (2005 Direct to Video): Anthony Greer is a corrupt CIA agent who wants to destroy an office building in Los Angeles. To overshadow the destruction of the building and keep attention away from himself, he masterminds a long series of events which lead to a terrorist group acquiring a nuclear bomb that they plan to use to destroy all of Los Angeles. Greer frames Jonathan Cold for a series of murders in an attempt to keep him from interfering. Near the end, he shoots and kills the leader of the terrorists, Nicholi, taunting him about the fact that he was just a pawn in his plan.
  • Blackhat: Sadak starts the film by overloading the coolant pumps at the Chai Wan nuclear plant in Hong Kong, simply to test his code for a future attack. As Chen Dawai and Nicholas Hathaway attempt to track him down, he has hired mercenaries kill Chen with a car bomb while FBI agents Barrett and Jessup are gunned down in a separate confrontation. Sadak's plan is to flood several tin mines in Malaysia, destroying several villages in the process, in order to make a fortune trading tin futures. Sadak never shows any need for the money he will make from this attack, only seeking the notoriety he will gain from orchestrating such a massive payday. His allies are treated as mere assets, and he shows no sympathy when they die. Ultimately, Sadak's only care is for himself and his reputation, regardless of how much damage he causes or how many people he has to kill.
  • BlacKkKlansman: Walker is the bombmaker of the Ku Klux Klan's Colorado Springs chapter, driven by racist spite to kill for his cause. Developing a powerful explosive, Walker guides Connie Kendrickson through his and Felix's plan to bomb an activist rally where hundreds of black students and lynching survivors will be gathered. Though the initial plan to murder the crowd fails, Walker had prepared a "Plan B", and attempts to bomb the home of the activist rally's leader to kill her and everyone inside.
  • The Black Knight (1954): Sir Palamides is a corrupt Saracen Knight of the Round Table seeking to assassinate the noble King Arthur and put the Christian-unfriendly King Mark on the throne to kill the burgeoning faith. Palamides dresses up his soldiers like Viking invaders to divert suspicion from himself, having them massacre innocent lives across the country including a monastery full of unarmed monks. When lining up a group of monks who do nothing but pray in fear for their safety, Palamides idly wonders how effective their prayers will be against arrows before ordering his men to answer his question. Palamides tries to have a fair lady tortured by his hulking brute; doesn't care when he accidentally assassinates Mark instead of Arthur; and tries to have his "Vikings" lay waste to Camelot itself to seize power.
  • The Black Magic duology has these two Evil Sorcerers:
    • Black Magic (1975): Shian Jianmi is a sadistic shaman-for-hire willing to murder and ruin one's life for money. Murdering two lovers on the behest of a wife, he later leaves the wife to die when his first attempt to fight Fu Long fails. Retreating to modern Hong Kong, he uses his powers to have lovers cheat on each other and grant one a slow, painful death for profit, killing those who don't pay on time. Found by Fu Long, Shian has Xu go on a violent rampage against his construction coworkers and later attempts to have him commit suicide via walking off a steel girder.
    • Black Magic 2 (1976): Kang Cong is a selfish shaman who will do anything to extend his own mortality. Luring in various women to be used as his sex slaves, Kang feedson their breast milk to extend his life. Resurrecting several corpses to act as his henchmen, Kang has the corpses act as prostitutes to lure men to his mansion where he makes business deals with them. If one of them were to cross him, they would either be given incurable tumors or instantly decay into a rotting corpse, something he's already done 10 times. When the captured Margaret is freed by her lover Zhenshing, Kang has the two killed and used in his zombie army. After murdering a shaman trying to stop him, he tries to make Cuiling his new slave and unleashes his zombies onto Zhonping when he arrives at his mansion.
  • Black Mask: Commander Hung, once a soldier of the 701 project, dedicates himself to crime and taking over the Chinese underworld. Viewing himself superior to normal humans, Hung shows no remorse in the mass slaughter of soldier and criminal alike. One recalcitrant drug lord finds his own daughter's legs delivered to him in the mail, and another has a bomb implanted in his chest that takes out a large portion of a hospital. Coldly informing his old protégé Tsui Chik of his new obsolescence for siding with humans, Hung tries to murder him while blackmailing the government and deciding to turn over all his intelligence to international syndicates and terrorists once they give him what he wants anyways.
  • The Black Pirate: The pirate lieutenant manages to be worse than his captain. While the two jointly slaughter entire crews of ships and then leave the survivors tied up before detonating gunpowder to kill them and sink their ships, the lieutenant takes over when the heroic Black Pirate, a surviving victim and in truth the Duke of Arnoldo, arrives and kills the captain to join the crew. Lusting after a "princess" they captured, when the Black Pirate staves off any evil activity by promising a ransom, the lieutenant arranges to blow up the ransom ship so he can try to rape the beautiful Isobel while attempting to murder his rival, culminating in a final battle as he attacks Isobel and would kill anyone who gets in his way.
  • Black Rain: Yakuza boss Sato Koji is the upstart rival of old-school Oyabun Sugai. Known for the immense trail of bodies he leaves behind him, Sato brutally kills two men in America with intent to slaughter enough to disrupt Sugai's counterfeiting scheme. Arranging his freedom in Japan, Sato later tortures and kills the partner of hero Nick Conklin, intending on massacring all the Oyabuns, Sugai, and their people so he can claim dominance of the underworld.
  • The Black Room: Gregor de Berghman is a cruel Tyrolean baron who devises an Evil Plan to murder his kindly twin brother, Anton, and impersonate him. Gregor's hobbies include serial murder; the film's namesake Black Room is a secret room where Gregor hides the bones of all the women he's killed. After successfully killing his brother and assuming his identity, Gregor also murders a colonel who knows the truth and arranges for an innocent man to take the fall for it. Gregor even kills his own devoted servant Mashka, a woman who has nothing but devotion to him, because she's an inconvenience to his plan of marrying another woman he values only as an object for him to possess.
  • Black Rose (2014): Detective Matt Robinson is the Serial Killer the investigation is looking for, deceiving the investigation by railroading it to get away with his crimes. After being hustled by a Mail-Order Bride scheme, Robinson grows to despise Russian women and begins abducting them, especially prostitutes, to torture to death. After murdering numerous women and even one proprietor while mocking heroine Emily Smith about the horrific manner of their deaths, Robinson targets the woman who cheated him to torture her to death as well.
  • Black Samson (1974): Johnny Nappa is a racist and sadistic gangster out to muscle in on the territory of the heroic nightclub owner and neighborhood protector Samson. Gleefully killing whoever gets in his way, even his own men, Nappa bombs Samson's nightclub, and when he sends his girlfriend undercover, he savagely beats and tries to murder her when he suspects she's become soft on Samson. Later trying to lure Samson into a trap by kidnapping the latter's lover Leslie, Nappa is confronted by the entire neighborhood and tries to have them gunned down when they get in his way.
  • Black Sunday: Princess Asa Vadja is a devil-worshipping vampiric witch who terrorized ancient Moldavia. For her crimes, her brother was forced to sentence her to death, for which she vowed to avenge herself on her own family. 200 years later, Asa is resurrected and begins her work killing the Vadja household and their servants one-by-one. All of this is part of her plan to absorb her descendant Katia's youth so she can torment the Earth once more. When Dr. Andre Gorobec arrives to save Katia, Asa attempts to trick him into killing her himself.
  • Blackway: Richard Blackway is introduced stalking Lillian and killing her cat, having previously tried to rape her as well. Blackway frequently scams the residents of the town, brutally beating them or threatening to harm their families if they dare to tell the police. It is also revealed that Blackway quit being a police officer in order to become a drug peddler and human trafficker, with one trafficking victim being kidnapped and drugged into compliance. When the protagonists find him, he attempts to murder Lester and Nate and rape Lillian again.
  • Blacula: Count Dracula, from the first film, despite his brief appearance, manages to stand out as a cruel, wicked monster responsible for the events of the duology. A slave trader who views slavery as glorious, Dracula, upon hearing that African Prince Mamuwalde wants to end Africa's slave trade, uses his dozen brainwashed wives to seize Mamuwalde and turn him into a vampire, rechristening him as "Blacula". Locking him away in a coffin to suffer for centuries, Dracula coldly locks Blacula's wife Luva with her husband to starve to death.
  • The Blade (1995): Fei Lung, the Flying Dragon, is a violent tattooed bandit who leads his men to pillage and destroy whatever they can. We see in flashbacks that Fei Lung attacked an innocent village and killed its defenders, killing The Hero's father in the process. Fei Lung later gloats he skinned the man for the presumption of standing against him. In present, when Fei Lung attacks a town's foundry, he attempts to massacre every worker inside, mockingly calling them "little pigs" for the slaughter. Even his fighting style is designed to cause as much pain as possible, with Fei Lung overwhelming the enemy with dizzying speed and cutting them to shreds. In his final fight, when he realizes he's beaten, Fei Lung even attempts to use his final moments to attack the hero's unarmed friends and murder them as well.
  • Blade Runner 2049: Niander Wallace is a corporate executive who fancies himself a godly figure. Producing Replicants as slave labor, Wallace intends to find a way to breed them infinitely so as to have the best labor force, demonstrating his control over them by forcing one Replicant to slit its own throat. Later brutally killing a newly made Replicant to make a point, Wallace has his adjunct Luv torture and kill any in her way to find the naturally born daughter of Rick Deckard and the Replicant Rachael. Later offering Deckard a new Rachael, Wallace kills her before dropping any hint at affability and sending Deckard off to be tortured for information.
  • Blast (1997): Omado Kallal is a terrorist notorious for killing his hostages. Rigging Atlanta with numerous bombs in time for the Olympics, Omado takes a swim team hostage after killing most of the personnel near the pool, executing several girls on camera to show he's serious. Detonating one bomb to prove his point, Omado plots to kill all his hostages and level a huge chunk of Atlanta, even tying the hero's wife to the bombs so he will die knowing he failed to save her.
  • Blast (2004): Michael Kittridge, real name Talbert Skyler, is a seemingly fanatical Eco-Terrorist whose extreme agenda hides much more sinister ends. Taking an oil rig hostage and massacring those who attempt to escape, Skyler ruthlessly attempts to murder its captain Lamont Dixon, showing no care to the life of his young companion Eric he endangers in the process and later coldly executes the one doctor on the ship after she loses Eric. Capturing and violently torturing Dixon, Dixon finally learns that Skyler murdered the real Kittredge to take his identity and use a believable agenda to cover his real plan, which involves launching an EMP over California to knock out the state's power to destroy any evidence of Skyler's mass robberies. When confronted by a horrified Dixon on the countless innocent lives this would cost, Skyler nonchalantly brushes them aside and threatens to murder Eric right in front of him to goad him into staying down.
  • The Bleeding: The Vampire Monarch, Cain Black, seeks to spread vampiric dominion over the world while running a nightclub called Club Mortem where humans are regularly slaughtered. Having slayers captured and tortured, Cain tracks down and murders one hunter when he escapes before inviting several women to one of the clubs. We see Cain keeps a chamber full of dozens, if not hundreds of corpses, capturing women to have his men drain them sadistically, or have them butchered and carved alive by another vampire. Cain then initiates a slaughter of the humans in his club before attempting to murder his own brother, Shawn Black, to become even more powerful with his blood.
  • Bleeding Steel (2017): The Woman in Black is Andre's main executioner. Introduced by brutally killing guards on a hotel, she kills a famous writer that knows about the experiments on human enhancement and tries to kill another person investigating them. Finding the girl used for the experiments, she threatens to open fire in a stadium and have her men kill the cops in the place. Kidnapping the girl, she doesn't care about the lives of her men during the following battle. Once she is captured, the Woman accidentally kills one of her men and then kills another one out of desperation at being captured. A stoic assassin, the Woman in Black manages to be worse than her own boss.
  • Bless the Child: Eric Stark is a Satanist and cult leader who is trying to find a "special" empowered child by kidnapping kids born on a certain time of a certain day as a prophecy foretells, testing them for powers and murdering them when they fail. In public, Stark's status as the leader of a self-help quasi-religious group keeps him from drawing scrutiny. When he kidnaps his new wife's daughter Cody from her aunt Mim, Stark believes he has found the child he needs and proceeds to try to break her faith in goodness, while encouraging her to burn a homeless man alive. When Cody refuses, Stark burns the man himself out of spite. Stark and his men kill other people during the film and when Cody and Mim are reunited, Stark furiously attempts to gun both down rather than surrender his hold on Cody.
  • The Blind Menace (1960): The blind Suginoichi is a would-be Corrupt Politician. A manipulative snake of a man, Suginoichi spends the film committing a series of atrocities, from extortion, blackmail, murder and rape, while framing others for his crimes. In such instance, a noblewoman comes to Suginoichi for a loan of 50 ryo to save her brother from debt. Suginoichi gives her the money, but rapes her as well. The next day, in front of her husband, Suginoichi asks Lady Namie to return the money he's given her "for safekeeping." He later informs her he'll return it to her in exchange for sex- 5 ryo at a time. Suginoichi engineers his master's fall and death to take his place and when another of his rape victims kills herself out of shame, he simply laughs. He manipulates Yakuza into murdering his master and takes his place, securing a high-class wife in the process. When he realizes her infidelity, he decides she'll never fully belong to him and murders her as well. At the end, when his fortunes collapse, Suginoichi spends his downfall ranting at all around him, issuing impotent threats while unable to believe his defeat.
  • Blindsided (aka Penthouse North) (2013): Robert Hollander is a smug criminal and jewel thief after the diamonds hidden by heroine Sara's boyfriend Ryan. Sending his partner Chad to kill Ryan and recover the diamonds, getting another man killed in the process, Hollander intervenes when Sara escapes. Torturing Sara and mocking her blindness, Hollander waterboards her; throws her cat off a roof; betrays and kills Chad; while prepares to murder Sara's pregnant sister and brother-in-law; and ultimate tries to kill Sara as well.
  • The Blind Warrior (1987): Raden Parna is a warlord so evil he's rumored to be the son of Satan himself. Conquering the local region and oppressing thousands, Raden regularly has people killed for any infraction to his rule and has innocent women regularly taken to him to sacrifice them to the evil god he ostensibly worships, only to secretly dump them into his private sanctum to have them serve his carnal desires. Raden orders a village completely exterminated to seize a gold mine they harbor and institutes awful slavery of the local residents, with all the prisoners forced into grueling labor as the guards torture and murder them for any perceived slight, even children seen forced to work and cut down in front of their mothers. Further boasting a harem full of women he's butchered the loved ones of and even keeping some of his soldiers loyal under the threat of their families' lives, Raden has an entire settlement where the heroes are nesting at slaughtered, throwing the titular blind warrior into a "hellhole" to die and trying to marry his companion Samila to make her his.
  • Blitz: Barry Weiss was once a common street thug with a knack for getting himself thrown in jail. After attacking two men in a billiard hall and getting beaten up by Detective Sergeant Tom Brant, Weiss decided to become a Cop Killer and, known as "Blitz", murder all of the police officers responsible for his arrests. He guns down two police constables and beats an inspector to death with a hammer, and later on drowns Brant's informant, Radnor. He attacks another police constable, and kills her teenage friend when he comes to her rescue. After being detained by police and released due to lack of evidence, he disguises himself as a police officer and tries to kill Brant.
  • The Blob (1988): Dr. Christopher Meddows is a military scientist who specializes in bioweapons. He's inadvertently responsible for developing the Blob by sending the satellite and the proto-Blob sample into space, where it mutated before it fell back down on Earth. He didn't expect it to develop into a ravenous, all-consuming monster, but he is more than pleased at this development and its military potential. He cordons off the town where the Blob has started its spread so he can test its killing potential on all the inhabitants and to perform further experiments on the survivors. He's even willing to sacrifice his own men to further his goal, as he orders the sewers blocked off when two of the heroes and one of his men try to escape from the pursuing Blob.
  • Blood and Black Lace: Massimo Morlacchi is a greedy fashion modeling agent who murdered a wealthy Count and staged his death as an accident, seducing and secretly marrying his widow and making her his accomplice. When his crime was discovered and used as blackmail leverage by one of his agency's models, Massimo brutally strangles her to death. Learning of the existence of a diary in which she documented the crime amongst other dark secrets of her co-workers, he murders two other models who had attempted to steal it to hide their own vices, the first by gouging out her eyes, and the second by shoving her face-first into a hot stove. When the police start closing in, Massimo has his wife kill a fifth model, stage the death as a suicide, and leave the killer's costume behind to frame the dead woman. She does, so, but as she makes her escape through a balcony, he arrives and impersonates a police officer, hoping to startle her into falling to her death and leaving him heir to her fortune.
  • Blood Diamond: Captain Poison, wishing to escape Sierra Leone via as much wealth as he can amass, is a warlord in the Revolutionary United Front who ravages the countryside and has the hands of young men lopped off as a twisted joke on voting to take the "future in your hands". Running brutal slave labor for diamond harvesting, Poison kills any who try to keep diamonds for themselves, later massacring numerous civilians and taking the children to be used as Cannon Fodder and brainwashed Child Soldiers, with a disturbing interest in Dia, the son of his nemesis Solomon Vandy. When confronting Vandy once again, Poison threatens to force him to watch as he rape his wife in front of his eyes, then slit her throat, and keep his daughters as his Sex Slaves out of spite.
  • Blood Father: Jonah Pincerna is Lydia Link's abusive boyfriend and a violent cartel member who oversees properties owned by his uncle. Making millions by robbing the homes for the money his uncle has hidden in them, Jonah then frames and murders the innocent tenants; roping Lydia into acting as a lookout while he and his men execute two. Trying to force Lydia into killing one with him, Jonah is injured when Lydia accidentally shoots him instead. Furiously pursuing Lydia and her father, John, Jonah forces John's friend, Kirby, to lure out Lydia by torturing him, capturing her and murdering Kirby while calling John to make him listen.
  • Blood Feast: Fuad Ramses is an Egyptian caterer who worships the goddess Ishtar. In order to resurrect his goddess, Ramses kills young women to make them into the dishes of a blood feast for her. After getting enough flesh, he kidnaps a woman and whips her to get her to agree to be Ishtar's vessel, leading to her demise. He then tricks the guest of honour at a party he's catering into agreeing to host Ishtar, nearly killing her before being stopped by the police.
  • Blood Fest: Horror film director Anthony Walsh puts together the festival Blood Fest to make the best film ever. While his silent partner just wants to blow the place up, Walsh instead wants to be as sadistic as possible by allowing his victims to have hope first. Setting up monsters by subjecting mentally ill people to Mind Rape to make them believe they are famous slashers; importing Eastern European women and infecting them with diseases to make them crave blood and sharpening their teeth to make vampires; and using reanimated corpses for zombies, Walsh unleashes them, massacring hundreds of innocents to capture the deaths on film. Walsh and his partner even install a microchip in the attendees' wristbands to drive them to become murderous rage zombies so that there are no survivors.
  • Bloodlust: Dr. Albert Balleau is a bored hunter who believes in Hunting the Most Dangerous Game, luring innocent teenagers to his island to become victims. Balleau happily hunts them down and murders whoever he finds while showing no mercy to his men. Those who fail him are killed or left to die. When he discovers his wife is unfaithful and helping his victims, Balleau murders his wife and her loves, and stuffs the corpses before returning to trying to kill the teens.
  • Blood of Beasts: Sven is the finest warrior in a Norse tribe, and betrothed to Princess Freya. While hunting for the beast Agnar, Sven leaves his king to die so that he can claim the throne more quickly. His consolidation of power involves him threatening his supposed best friend's life if he talks about the battle and declaring that Freya will join him in marriage and bear him many children. When Freya rescues her father at the cost of her own capture, Sven decides to kill the king. He never gets the chance, though, because he has to join his fellow tribesmen in rescuing Freya so he can maintain his image, though he does take the time to declare that he will kill anybody who calls him a coward. The army rescues Freya and Sven leads them in seemingly killing Agnar, but the beast survives. This culminates in a duel on his and Freya's wedding, leading to Sven mortally wounding Freya when attempting to kill Agnar.
  • Blood of the Innocent (aka Beyond Forgiveness) (1994):
    • Dr. Lem, a seemingly jovial organ doctor, is actually one of the heads of an organ harvesting conspiracy. A sadist who participated for money and satisfaction, Lem partners with the Russian mob to bring him innocents to remove their organs, while making sure to keep his patients numb, but awake to experience the pain of their surgery—with not even children safe from this. Once Frank and his lover Anna are in his mitts, Lem tries to remove a conscious Frank's heart, while planning to keep Anna all to himself. Slitting his conspirator Morszytn's throat for letting Frank escape, Lem tries to make a getaway with Anna by his side, threatening to mutilate and molest her unless Frank leaves him alone.
    • Zelepukhin and his mute gunman Scarface are the heads of the Russian mob assisting Lem in his organ harvesting operation. With the two originally dealing in prostitution, Scarface is tasked to lure strangers into his limousine to have their organs harvested—with children not even off-limits—while also keeping track of the organ trades. Scarface kickstarts the plot by killing Frank's younger brother Marty, and, under Zelepukhin's orders, massacres an entire marketplace after Frank arrives, even using one of his own men as a Human Shield.
  • Blood of the Tribades: Grando, leader of the plague-riddled priests who took over the vampire village of Bathory, turned to persecuting the female vampires of Bathory after blaming them for the plague in the first place. After having already killed off every uninfected man in Bathory and exiled the women, Grando has his followers kill every woman they find with the intention to purge them all; even infants are left to the mercy of wolves by the men under his order. Psychotically obsessed with his own purity, Grando has any priests who fail or question him tortured, slicing out their eyes with rose thorns and forcing them to walk on broken glass, often to the point where they simply die.
  • The Blood on Satan's Claw:
    • The demonic Behemoth begins to corrupt the townspeople upon being unleashed, while driving some mad simply for fun. Forming a cult with Angel Blake as its champion and herald, Behemoth has numerous children murdered and flayed to summon it so it may institute Hell on Earth.
    • Angela "Angel" Blake started out as a mischievous and rebellious teenager in her village, before she and her friends discover pieces of the devil, Behemoth's bones. Quickly becoming an enthusiastic demon worshipper, Angel would lure the other children into join her cult. Seeking to restore Behemoth to the world, Angel would flay patches of his skin growing among the villagers, murdering those she can't convert, such as her supposed friend Mark, and his younger sister Cathy, who is raped as part of her sacrifice. Failing to seduce Reverend Fallowfield, Angel would accuse him of rape to try and get him killed. When her follower Margaret escapes witch hunters, Angel would whip her under the suspicion she betrayed them; finding out Margaret lost her piece of Behemoth's skin, Angel would abandon her to the hunters, expecting and wishing that their dogs rip her apart.
  • Blood Quantum: Alan, aka Lysol, Traylor's elder son, freely admits to being someone not worth looking up to. Proving this, Lysol unleashes zombies upon the Red Crow refugees, slaughtering and turning multiple innocents after stabbing his own younger brother. Intent on destroying the compound, Lysol feeds a woman to a zombie after using her to lure his family into a trap and even sets another on his own brother's pregnant girlfriend.
  • Blood Ranch (2006): Spider is the loudmouthed gang leader of "the Web", having established the horror show of a farm to serve as his own personal kingdom of freaks and pain. Luring drivers to his ranch, Spider has them subjected to all manner of torment—from toilet nooses to brutal beatings—while raping the women to his heart's content. Personally torturing a man for insulting him, Spider also carves off the arm of the man's girlfriend before decapitating his victim. Keeping a harem of teenage girls for his deviant desires, Spider even abuses his own minions, proudly bragging that the Web grants him the power to torture and kill whoever he wants just for fun.
  • Blood Red Sky:
    • Berg is the leader of the hijackers, organizing the murders of the air marshals to take control. Executing one passenger to show how serious he is to native Arab speaker Farid, Berg attempts to force Farid to read a statement declaring himself a terrorist hijacker so the plane will be shot down after Berg and his men flee, with everyone else onboard killed. Executing a hostage to force heroine Nadja to emerge from a cockpit, Berg then takes a teenage girl hostage with intent to murder her as well.
    • Eightball is a gleefully psychopathic and wantonly violent hijacker who kills several people, taunting and beating others while being gleeful about the impending deaths he assists with. Supplying Berg with a teenage girl as a hostage, Eightball is entranced by the power of Nadja as a vampire and injects himself with vampire blood. As a vampire, Eightball slaughters everyone in his path, killing or turning every passenger with intent to flee into civilization and drain all he finds when the plane lands.
  • Bloodrunners (2017): Chesterfield straddles the line between vampire and mobster, running a speakeasy where he uses blood as a commodity. Opening the film by torturing a victim, Chester removes his fingers and adds them to trophy case of others before murdering him. Having a group of crooked cops slaughtered when they attempt to blackmail him, Chester shows he is eager to kill anyone for his own gratification as well. Luring in multitudes of young women, Chester has them taken to his basement and slowly drained of blood as a new way forward for vampires where he can distribute blood and rule the underworld.
  • Blood Shot (2013): "Bob" is a terrorist on a campaign of terror against the West, hoping to use a reinforced nuclear bomb to destroy Los Angeles and every single person in the city. Bob has his own minions beheaded on camera for their failures; beats his harem for "distracting him from jihad", and sacrifices them in Black Magic rituals; possesses the vampire stalking him and forces him to kill his own allies; and finally promises to force the cop protagonist to watch his own wife's execution.
  • Bloodshot (2020): Dr. Emil Harting is the lead scientist of Rising Tech Industries. To take care of those who have defected from RST, Harting utilizes his pet project Ray Garrison, a soldier whom Harting has fashioned into his own personal assassin through the use of nanite technology and constant Mind Rape. Harting brainwashes Ray to see Harting's rivals kill Ray's wife before unleashing Ray to slaughter everyone in his path. Harting subsequently resets Ray's memory and subjects him to the process all over again to release him on the next target, with all intention of killing Ray when his purpose is used. When KT, one of Harting's minions, tries to quit in disgust, Harting attempts to murder her by shutting off the respirator system that allows her to breath.
  • Blood Work: Jasper "Buddy" Noone, aka the "Code Killer", viewed himself as the villain to Detective Terry McCaleb's hero. When McCaleb suffers a fatal heart attack, Noone, refusing to let their "battle" end, begins killing off organ donors with the same blood type as McCaleb, knowing he will get a heart transplant faster. After McCaleb recovers and begins looking into the donors' murders, Noone, having inserted himself into McCaleb's life as his best friend, assists him with the investigation, killing off anyone who could implicate him in the killings. Failing to frame a criminal for the murders, and then being found out by McCaleb, Noone reveals he trapped Graciela, McCaleb's Love Interest, and her young nephew, on an abandoned boat, tries to use them as leverage to allow himself to escape, and then plans on resuming his killing spree and his "fight" against McCaleb. Stopped by McCaleb, Noone leads him to the hostages' whereabouts, then tries one last time to kill them all.
  • Bloody Chainsaw Girl (2016): Nero Aoi is a misanthropic, teenage scientist at Uguisu School who has dreams of world domination. Having become a pariah after experimenting on animals, Nero decides to be an anti-social outcast who builds a lab underneath the school and painfully turns her bullies into her mutant cyborg minions. Angered at Giko Nokomura for trying to befriend her, Nero orders her cyborgs kill her, planning to convert Giko into her own personal cyborg. Manipulating others into working for her, she coerces bullied cheerleader Bakutani into becoming a cyborg, and forcefully gives a sex change to the head of the ninja club to make him, Hanzo, and the club her cyborg bodyguards. Forcing the shop class to make weapons for her cyborgs, she turns 18 of its members into cyborgs, later killing them off and making them still-living skull attachments that power her Chainsaw of the Dead. Meeting Giko on the roof, Nero kills Hanzo when he gets in her way, attempts to detonate Bakutani when she tries to make amends with everyone, and still tries to kill Giko after she attempts to talk her into friendship.
  • The Bloody Judge (1970):
    • Robert Jeffries is the highest judge in England during King James II's turbulent rule. Using his position to root out supposed traitors to the King, Jeffries is in truth a sadistic coward using his authority to brutalize others for his own satisfaction. Having a young woman named Alicia tortured and branded as a witch, Jeffries offers to free her if her sister Mary will sleep with him, and orders Alicia burned alive when Mary is too horrified to respond. Jeffries brutally crushes the Monmouth Rebellion and has the survivors and their loved ones tortured brutally and sentenced to be hanged, drawn and quartered. When he has Mary's lover Harry, he forces Mary to sleep with him to free Harry, only to reveal he plans to have Harry sent to the plantations as a slave anyways. Sadistic and cruel, Jeffries is devoted solely to his own power, advancement and appetites.
    • Satchel, bailiff of the Earl of Wessix and eventual right-hand of Jeffries, eventually proves himself to be as bloodthirsty and corrupt as the Judge himself. Already a vile man who aids in the capturing of rebels to be tried, tortured, and executed while personally murdering those who resist, Satchel shows his true colors by attempting to rape the sister of Alicia whom he captured and saw horribly tortured and executed. Having his face burned in retaliation, Satchel goes turncoat and takes up service with Jeffries, beating his slave Sally to a bloody pulp for helping the Earl's son Harry while rounding up the female slaves of the region and violently threatening those who resist. Satchel even tortures his way through a countless number of prisoners during the Bloody Assizes, hurting people regardless of guilt in every shape and form solely out of his own depraved sense of enjoyment.
    • Jack Ketch, Jeffries's clubfooted torturer and executioner, runs Jeffries's prison as a system of nightmarish torture under his total oversight, personally subjecting prisoners to flaying, dismemberment, violation, mutilation, and any other wicked torture he devises to see them scream and writhe all before he sends them to executed. Ketch personally mutilates Alicia Gray out of nothing more than sick pleasure when she ends up in his clutches and, during the Bloody Assizes, has hundreds of prisoners violently tortured by himself and Satchel, enjoying himself all the while.
  • Bloody Mallory: Abbadon the Dark was one of the original fallen angels who rebelled against God due to hating humans. When his brethren were imprisoned, he set about on a scheme to become Pope and use the Catholic Church's resources to help him free them and Kill All Humans. To set up a base of operations, he had a village trapped in a Pocket Dimension, with the villagers and anybody who stumbled upon the portal being trapped in a nightmare of torture and murder. In the modern day, Abbadon has some ghouls rape some nuns to distract demon huntress Mallory so he could have them attacked, killing their government liaison and putting their child psychic in a coma while he staged his own kidnapping and killed a bunch of guards. When Abbadon starts the ceremony to open the portal to Hell, he has a circle of cultists commit mass suicide, proving he cares as little about demon lives as he does human.
  • Blow Out: Burke is a professional assassin who shoots out the tires on a Presidential candidate's car to send it into the water. While he succeeds in killing his intended target, a woman in the car with him survives. Deciding he needs to eliminate her as well, Burke devises a truly cruel plan to cover his tracks. So there will be no inconvenient questions, Burke becomes a Serial Killer by targeting women who look similar to his target, strangling them to death with a garrote. He finally attempts to kill the girl, Sally during a parade so her death will be passed off as the act of a random maniac. Burke is indicated to be nothing more than a sociopath using his job to hurt others.
  • Blue Velvet: Frank Booth is a sadistic, violent crime lord keeping singer Dorothy Vallens as a Sex Slave by threatening to kill her husband. Keeping her son captive as well, Frank cuts off an ear from Dorothy's husband to keep her in line and later comes to her apartment to viciously beat and rape her. To expand his business, Frank also makes use of a crooked detective to have rival drug dealers murdered and their narcotics stolen from the evidence locker to sell through his own men. When noticing hero Jeffrey Beaumont at Dorothy's apartment, Frank kidnaps him to beat and abuse the teenager, threatening to kill Jeffrey if he ever crosses Frank again. After Dorothy escapes Frank beating her, he kills her husband and crudely lobotomizes his own henchman in a fit of rage, returning to her apartment where Jeffrey is hiding, gleeful to murder him as well.
  • Bluebeard (1901): The first cinematic adaptation of Bluebeard is as vile as his literary counterpart and possibly the earliest example of a CM in cinema. A wealthy nobleman who charms and marries a young woman, Bluebeard's sadistic pastime is revealed when the woman walks through a locked door she is warned against going into: all of Bluebeard's previous wives tortured to death and hung upon hooks. Bluebeard attempts to do the same to his new wife before he's killed and his victims revived through divine intervention.
  • Bluebeard (1944): Gaston Morrell is a misogynist Serial Killer responsible for the "Bluebeard" murders in Paris. Having grown obsessed with a woman, Morrell throttled her when he discovered she was a prostitute, constantly succumbing to a frenzy with other women before murdering them as well. Morrell murders his lover Renee when she questions him, all while romancing heroine Lucille, even when he murders her sister Francine. Killing an art dealer who covered for him to elude justice, Morrell even tries to murder Lucille when she plans to go to the police.

    Bm - Bz 
  • Boarding School: The hired killer who took the name of "Dr. Daniel Sherman" is a sociopathic hitman hired by Jacob Felsen's stepfather to kill his son. Having killed since his teens, the hitman invades the boarding school Jacob is sent to alongside his partner Ms. Adams, killing the Shermans to pose as them, stuffing their bodies in the freezer. Suffocating Elwood after news of his mom coming to pick him up, the hitman tries to poison the mom, only to kill Ms. Adams after she stabs her to death. Partnering with Jacob, he murders Claude with a fireplace poker and tries to pose the murders as an accident by burning the whole school and its students to the ground, planning to kill Jacob before he escapes.
  • The Body Snatcher: The sinister John Gray, "evil himself", is a cabman by day and a grave robber by night. Gray digs up cadavers to provide to his associate, Dr. "Toddy" MacFarlane, and he shows off the kind of man he is by braining a dog with his shovel when it almost gives him away. Eventually, taking inspiration from the old case of Burke and Hare, Gray murders a harmless, blind street singer to give her corpse to MacFarlane. When Gray's assistant Joseph tries to blackmail him, Gray laughs, smothers him to death, and presents his body to "Toddy" as a sick gift. Gray finally admits he puts MacFarlane through such psychological torture just for the pleasure of having a rich man bent to his whims, and he vows he'll never stop tormenting MacFarlane. Gray haunts MacFarlane even past his own death, having broken the doctor beyond the point of all recovery, and his words follow MacFarlane to his untimely death: "you'll never be rid of me, Toddy!"
  • The Bone Collector: Marcus Andrews, aka Richard Thompson, the titular Serial Killer, was a forensics expert who was convicted by Lincoln Rhyme, after planting evidence that resulted in six innocent people being imprisoned, with one of them hanging themselves. After being let out of prison six years later, Marcus, driven by revenge towards Lincoln, abducts people by posing as a taxi driver and surgically removing a piece of a bone for Lincoln to use as clues, and puts them in life-threatening scenarios, giving Lincoln and his partner, Amelia Donaghy, barely enough time to save them before they die a horrific death. While Amelia saves a young girl that was tied to a pier, Marcus goes to Lincoln's house, killing the police captain and Lincoln's caretaker, to confront him. Blaming him for the abuse he suffered in prison, Marcus attempts to kill Lincoln before being shot down by Amelia.
  • The Boogeyman (2023): The Boogeyman is a vile entity speculated to have haunted mankind from the beginning of time. Despite its capability to kill entire families, the Boogeyman prioritizes driving its victims to the brink of insanity, prolonging the torment of its victims much to its sadistic amusement. After slaughtering Lester Billings's three children—the youngest being an infant—it stalks the Harper family, gradually breaking them down and feeding on their trauma. When Rita Billings fails to kill the Boogeyman in an elaborate harebrained scheme, the Boogeyman gruesomely rips her in half before retreating to the house and taking Dr. Will Harper and Sawyer hostage.
  • The Book of Eli: The despotic Carnegie uses his followers to rob and murder travelers, seeking a book to extend his grip on the post-apocalyptic world. Discovering Eli has the book he seeks, Carnegie tries to use Solara, the daughter of his abused mistress, to seduce Eli, and beats his mistress when Solara fails. Revealing the book to be a King James Bible, Carnegie intends to use it to manipulate people's faith for power. Pursuing Eli and Solara after they flee, when Eli gives Carnegie the book because of his threat to Solara's life, Carnegie immediately fatally shoots Eli, leaving excitedly to bend more people to his will.
  • Book of Monsters (2018): The Shapeshifter is the monster that butchered young Sophie's mother in front of her. Returning to kill Sophie on her 18th birthday to complete a ritual to unleash its demonic kin on mankind, the Shifter tortures a man to death and unleashes monsters to slaughter the partygoers at Sophie's house, even taking its first victim and fusing him to a monster while leaving him in horrible agony. Manipulating the others, it tries to kill Sophie's Love Interest Jess while mocking Sophie over her mother's death before trying to kill her as well.
  • Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2: In this Alternate Continuity, this version of Elly Kedward, aka the Blair Witch, is depicted as being less mysterious in favor of being more upfront and personal. Elly is the spirit that haunts the woods of Burkettsville and is responsible for centuries of death and disappearances, especially of children. When Erica theorizes that Elly was an innocent victim of persecution and makes contact with Elly, the witch is revealed to be a malicious being who starts off tormenting the tour group with visions of her child victims, and is implied to caused Tristen to have a miscarriage. Later it's revealed the witch has been possessing not just Tristen and Erica, but the rest of their group as well, with an addition of gaslighting; having them slaughter a group of tourists in a ritualistic orgy; having Kim kill a woman she had an argument with; and seemingly having Jeff kill Erica. When the group confronts a seemingly possessed Tristen, who goads them into hanging her, a tape later reveals that the witch had them under a delusion while killing a terrified Tristen, ruining the lives of her friends.
  • Boot Camp: Logan is the head of security who uses his authority to torment the campers, offering the girls yellow shirts for early release in exchange for sexual favors and beating the boys for the slightest of reasons. When Logan catches Trina stealing food, he makes an offer to keep it a secret and get her closer to early release if she has sex with him, and when she eventually refuses he resorts to raping her, leaving her heavily traumatized. When Danny drowns to death, Logan lies to the other guards that he had drowned while attempting to escape the camp. When confronted by the campers for his crimes, Logan attempts to justify his actions by claiming he was disciplining them. After a riot breaks out, Logan tries to ditch the camp, leaving the rest of the staff behind.
  • Borderland: Papa Santillan is both a charismatic crime lord and the head of a death cult active near the border of Mexico with a penchant for brutal torture. Sacrificing dozens of victims in ritualistic killings so that the gods may protect his cocaine smuggling operation, Santillan has a police detective mutilated and beheaded for trying to stop him while his partner, Ulises, is Forced to Watch everything. Deciding to kill an American to appease the gods, a young man is kidnapped for Santillan and when his friends, Ed and Henry, begin searching their friend to save him, Santillan has the cousin of Ed's Love Interest murdered before Henry is hacked to death with machetes. Using Phil for one of his rituals, Santillan mutilates his shoulder with a cleaver and has him decapitated while he goes to take a bath. When confronted by Ulises, Santillan kills him anyway despite the man having showed him mercy.
  • Born to Raise Hell: Costel is a Romanian gangster and nightclub owner who has made a business out of breaking into wealthy people’s homes, stealing whatever he and his men can find, and killing the family inside. During these home invasions, Costel personally rapes and kills the wife, sometimes having sex with them even after they’re dead. He’s also perfectly willing to kill his own men, such as when he performs a drive-by on one of his drug runners along with some police after said runner gets captured. When Dimitri, a drug kingpin, demands that Costel pay him the money he owes, Costel responds by performing one of his home invasions on Dimitri’s house, resulting in the death of Dimitri’s wife, and during which Costel attempts to murder Dimitri’s young son.
  • Bottom Feeder (2007): Maxine Krendal is a sociopathic government agent. Pretending to work for Charles Deaver, Krendal brutally and sadistically beats Dr. Nathaniel Leech nearly to death and leaves him trapped in an underground complex. Intentionally incorrectly administering his healing drug, Krendal condemns him to 24 hours of agonizing hunger. Discovering a salvage crew in the tunnels, Krendal orders them all killed. When confronted by the monster that Nathaniel had become, Krendal sacrifices her partner as bait for him and leaves him to be torn apart. Despite the danger and suffering involved, Krendal still desires his drug to create an army of monstrous Super Soldiers. Despite being a government agent, Krendal enjoys every second of what she does.
  • Bound (1996): Caesar is the abusive, paranoid mobster boyfriend of the wily Violet. A man not shy to torture and murder, Caesar clues us into the kind of man he is by forcing Violet to stay and listen as he and his compatriots torture a man they suspect of robbing them. When Violet and her closet ex-con girlfriend try and gaslight Caesar to think his mobsters are plotting against him so they can escape with the mobsters' money, Caesar digs in. Killing his own boss in an impulsive moment of fury, as well the man's son and bodyguard, Caesar decides to torture the information out of Violet and Corky as well, trying to make Corky watch as he asks Violet "ten times"—with a pair of pruning shears to the fingers. Caesar still plans on killing more of his own allies in paranoia, and even when Violet negotiates a position of interest for herself, Caesar is noncommittal about sparing either her or Corky.
  • The Bourne Series:
    • Identity & Supremacy: Ward Abbott is a corrupt CIA chief, serving as one of the architects of Operation Treadstone and the head of its day-to-day operations. Abbott oversaw the creation of Treadstone and the implementation of its many brutal training routines, involving torture and psychological rewiring of soldiers into killing machines. After Abbott stole millions of dollars of CIA money with the help of Yuri Gretkov, Abbott tested Treadstone's capabilities by assassinating politician Vladimir Neski and his wife to silence their outrage against Gretkov's corruption. With dozens of people—terrorist, political dissident, and American citizen alike—murdered by Treadstone's operatives on Abbott's watch, Abbott later murders his subordinate Alexander Conklin to pin everything on him and rebrand Treadstone as "Blackbriar" to continue its operations. Later using Gretkov to kill off multiple CIA operatives and frame Jason Bourne for their deaths, Abbott tries to assassinate Bourne to cover his tracks—getting Bourne's lover Marie murdered in the process—and when he is nearing exposure, Abbott stabs his own assistant to death for unintentionally deducing Abbott's crimininal activities. Even when he is Driven to Suicide by exposure, Abbott reiterates that he feels no remorse for anything he has done, proclaiming himself a patriot to his last breath.
    • Jason Bourne:
      • CIA Director Robert Dewey, the Big Bad of the film and the Greater-Scope Villain of the series, seeks to gain total control over the private lives of the American public. In the past, Dewey was one of the top minds behind Operation Treadstone, which used torture and brainwashing to turn U.S. servicemen into dangerous assassins. When Treadstone founder and Jason Bourne's father Richard Webb found out that Dewey had his sights set on his son, he tried to shut down the program and go public about it, only for Dewey to order his assassination in a False Flag Operation before manipulating Jason into enlisting. Going on to oversee other shady government projects, Dewey spearheads an operation known as Iron Hand, which uses a backdoor in the highly popular social network platform Deep Dream to violate the privacy of millions of American citizens, and has Jason's friend Nicky Parsons assassinated when she tries to leak info about it to the public. When Jason takes up Nicky's cause, Dewey hunts him, showing his ruthlessness by having his own agents callously killed and threatening the safety of a former CIA employee's family should the man reveal anything to Bourne during a violent interrogation. During the film's climax, Dewey tries to use another false flag terrorist operation to kill both CIA employee Heather Lee and his own co-conspirator Aaron Kaloor for undermining his authority.
      • The Asset, Dewey's chief henchman, is first seen during the chase scene in Athens, where he murders several bystanders just to set up a sniper nest with which to ambush Bourne and Nicky. The Asset later derails Heather Lee's attempt to make contact with Bourne by murdering his fellow CIA operatives sent to monitor the meeting, callously disregarding the fact that they are his comrades and that they have nothing to do with his beef with Bourne. Finally, after failing in his attempt to assassinate Kalloor and Lee in Vegas, the Asset murders a LVMP SWAT officer, hijacks his SWAT truck, and charges it straight into a traffic full of civilian cars just to put a few yards of distance from Bourne. In the climactic fight with Bourne, the Asset denounces Bourne as "a traitor, always has been a traitor," even though he's the one who railroaded Bourne into the CIA by using a car bomb to kill Bourne's father, a loyal CIA employee, and attributing it to a terrorist organization.
  • Bowery at Midnight (1942): Professor Brenner, aka "Karl Wagner", is a reputed psychologist and soup kitchen owner who uses his charitable activities as a front for his card-carrying villainy. A total sociopath responsible for a slew of robberies across the Bowery, Wagner always leaves an associate dead after each score—either killing them himself, or ordering them murdered as they beg for their lives—and has killed so many of his men he's filled a literal graveyard in the basement of his soup kitchen. Not afraid to murder the innocent either, Wagner murders a student of his who finds out the truth, but not before tormenting the man with the knowledge of his final seconds on Earth and allowing him to panic for his own sadistic amusement. In a last bid to escape, Karl murders even his own devoted wife, who had nothing but love for the man she thought she knew.
  • The Boy duology: Brahms is a demonic being inhabiting a porcelain doll. Since the 1800s, Brahms has inhabited the Heelshire Estate, preying on children with mental illnesses so they would stay with Brahms in the estate and follow his rules. If the families of the children ever broke the rules, Brahms would drive the children to murder them, having done so several times over the years. In the first film, Brahms drove a child sharing his name to murder a girl and then turned him into a feral madman who murdered several nannies hired to take care of the doll. After being broken, Brahms returns in the sequel, manipulating a man named Joseph into fixing him, and began preying on a boy named Jude, causing him to gut Joseph's dog, and nearly kill his cousin. Eventually trying to have Jude murder his parents, Brahms murders Joseph in a rage when Jude's father damages him.
  • The Boy Behind the Door: Ms. Burton is a seemingly kindly woman who is in truth a depraved child trafficker who makes a business out of abducting boys and handing them over to pedophiles to rape and torture. Opening the film abducting Bobby and Kevin, Burton leaves Bobby to suffocate in the trunk of her car while leaving Kevin in the clutches of one of her clients, outfitting him with a Shock Collar to keep him from escaping. When Bobby attempts to rescue his friend, Ms. Burton viciously pursues him throughout her house, shooting him and gouging the bullet wound, and even murdering a police officer who comes to investigate. Eventually getting fed up with the boys' resistance, Burton cuts her losses and attempts to murder both of them.
  • The Boys from Brazil (1978 film): Dr. Josef Mengele is a Nazi who fled to South America after the war to escape justice for his crimes in the concentration camps. Orchestrating a plot to build a Fourth Reich, he captures dozens of women and forcibly impregnates them with Adolf Hitler's DNA so that he can resurrect the dead dictator through cloning and renew Nazi Germany’s bid for world conquest. Mengele orders 94 men across the world killed as part of the experiment, performing the assassinations personally after he has a fallout with the rest of the retired Nazi leadership. He is prepared to kill anyone who stands in his way, including a Brazilian boy who spied on his compound. Mengele's endgame is to create a new Hitler—Mengele's ideal of the perfect sociopathic genocidal warlord—for every subsequent generation until the total extermination of the "lower races" is completed.
  • Boy Kills World: Melanie Van Der Koy is the head of PR for the ruling Van Der Koy family, but after Hilda went dark, became the de facto ruler of the city. Abusing and moulding her husband Glen into a sycophantic worm and demeaning her brother Gideon's writing aspirations and attempts to be more than The Brute, Melanie sics them on the citizens of the city, gathering up victims for the annual "culling" which she continues on Hilda's orders. Melanie's cullings are far worse than Hilda's ever were, with Melanie not caring whether they execute "criminals" or those loyal to the regime while making the cullings into sadist spectacles to inspire fear and loyalty in the populace. When Boy gets Glenn killed, Melanie merely bemoans how much work she put into moulding him into a public face and declares Boy will be executed in the culling, which she's made into a demented cereal commercial through a sponsorship. When Boy and his allies disrupt the culling, Melanie realises Gideon helped Boy, shooting him when he refuses to clean up his mess. Melanie personally lethally wounds Boy's friends, angry that all her "hard work" getting the cereal deal is down the drain, before Boy finally executes her.
  • The Brain (1988): Dr. Anthony Blakely is a power-hungry alien servant of the Brain. To get its master a foothold on Earth, Blakely founds a mental health clinic to brainwash people under the guise of helping them. Eventually, Blakely's popularity grows to the point of him getting a local pop psychology talk show, which he uses to feed the Brain independent thoughts, not caring that anybody who resists the hypnosis is Driven to Madness of the homicidal and suicidal variety. A fellow shrink at his clinic tries to quit out of ethical concerns, and Blakely laughs as the Brain devours her whole. When Jim Majelewski escapes from the clinic, Blakely frames him for multiple murders, one of which he committed by brainwashing a woman into killing her husband with a chainsaw for refusing to watch his show. Eventually, Blakely plans to send the Brain's mind control across Canada, then the world, while also giving Jim's girlfriend to the Brain as the latest of many humans to be its food.
  • Brain Damage: "Aylmer" is an ancient alien parasite that is coveted by humans due to his ability to produce a juice that is an addictive drug for humans. Aylmer is in the possession of elderly couple named Morris and Martha, who keep him alive by feeding him animal brains. Aylmer grows bored with this, desiring human brains to consume, and escapes to another apartment. Aylmer meets a young man named Brian and exposes him to his juices. Aylmer offers to give Brian his juices again, if he takes him for a walk. Brian, high out of his mind, is messing around in a junk yard, when a security guard tries to detain Brian. Aylmer kills the security guard and eats his brain. Later, while at a club, Brian meets an attractive woman and they go to the roof to have sex, but Aylmer eats her brain. When Brian discovers what Aylmer is doing, he tries to stop being Aylmer's pawn, but goes through horrible withdrawal pains and suffers from nightmarish illusions, with Aylmer mocking him and demanding that Brian obey him in exchange for his juice. Brian eventually breaks down and helps Aylmer kill another man at a motel. Later, while high and under Aylmer's influence, Brian kills his girlfriend. When Morris and Martha try to reclaim Aylmer and take him from Brian, Aylmer kills both of them.
  • The Brain from Planet Arous: Gor, the titular Brain Monster, is a megalomaniacal criminal warlord. Having fled Arous to escape punishment for previous crimes, he possesses the body of Steve March and kills his colleague Dan. Choosing Steve's body due to his position as a respected scientist, Gor plans to demonstrate his powers at a later nuclear test in order to blackmail the world. While pretending to be Steve, Gor uses his powers to destroy a plane, laughing like a maniac as he does. When a policeman investigates him due to the connection between Dan's body and the bodies of those from the plane, Gor fries him to death. At the nuclear test site, he destroys the site himself, ordering the generals watching to get representatives from certain countries or else he will destroy their capitals. When a corporal tries to shoot him, Gor kills him. When some of the representatives don't believe his claims, Gor destroys another plane, before ordering them to surrender all their industries to him, planning to enslave Earth as an invasion force to conquer the universe. He later tries to kill Sally when he notices her in Steve's house.
  • Brain of Blood (1971): Dr. Lloyd Trenton is an ambitious scientist who has the ability to perform brain transplants. Planning to gain control over the country of Khalid, he performs his surgery on its dying ruler Amir. Needing a fresh body, he sends his servant Gor to kill someone so he can use the corpse. When the body is too mangled for him to use, he uses Gor's body instead. To keep Amir's brain alive, he sends his assistant Dorro to drain blood from people he has kidnapped and kept in his cellar until they die from blood loss. Trenton also orders an assassin to kill Amir's envoy, causing all but Dr. Negserian to perish. When Amir escapes his lab, he uses a device to track him, causing Amir great pain when he uses it. He then uses the device to force Amir to kill Negserian and an agent named Tracy, before transplanting Amir's brain into Negserian's body.
  • Bram Stoker's Dracula: Dracula's brides are a trio of seductive women and brutal murderers. Lacking any of Dracula's own redeeming qualities, the trio have fed on blood through the ages, sexually assaulting Jonathan Harker and attempting to drain him before being satisfied by murdering and feeding on a baby Dracula brings for them. The brides proceed to torture and drain Jonathan to keep him weak over and over, later surfacing again to tempt Mina Harker into killing Van Helsing and violently tearing apart Van Helsing's horses for sheer spite.
  • The Brave (1997): McCarthy is a wealthy sadist who believes in the true essence of life being found in agonizing death. Finding desperate people, McCarthy pushes them into agreeing to star in his snuff films in return for paying their families. Once the contract is signed, there is no backing out, and McCarthy makes clear he will rape and murder the families should the victim try to do so.
  • Braveheart: King Edward I "Longshanks" is portrayed as far more evil than his real life counterpart ever was. Introduced as a "cruel pagan" who has annexed Scotland to England and just returned from a war with France, he authorizes mass rape in Scotland by restoring the ancient law of Ius Primae Noctis, giving English lords in Scotland the right to claim "first night" of any peasant girl in their domain upon their marriage. He's doing this to win support from the English lords necessary to solidify his rule in Scotland and to gradually end the Scottish as a nation by outbreeding them. He sees his effeminate son Edward II simply as the continuation of his legacy, throws his son's homosexual lover out of a window for daring to speak to him as an advisor and beats his son's face in afterwards. After William Wallace stages a Scottish rebellion against him, Longshanks announces his intent to reduce the country to ashes just out of petty spite at Wallace. During an engagement with the Scots he orders his archers to fire on his own troops while they're busy fighting the Scots, justifying it by stating that his men are expendable. After Wallace is captured by the English due to a conspiracy among the Scottish lords, Longshanks has him slowly and painfully tortured to death in a public execution while listening on from his own death bed.
  • Braven (2018): Kassen is a violent drug lord who first establishes himself by beating one of his own men to death in a public diner upon hearing the loss of his drugs. Attempting to retrieve his drugs from a cabin that Weston and Hallett stashed it in, Kassen kills Weston for interrupting him before ordering the rest of his men to kill the Braves family in the cabin, child included. Kassen would then take Linden Braven hostage where he murders him in front of his son Joe and shoots the sheriff dead, before trying to kill Joe, while telling his intent to gut Joe's wife and daughter like he did his father.
  • Breaking In (2018): Duncan is the most sadistic and murderous of the four burglars in the movie. After kidnapping the two children of the protagonist Shaun Russel, Duncan tries to persuade his collaborators into murdering them throughout the film. He would eventually murder the family's real estate agent by slitting her throat when she attempts to call the authorities. After finding the money he and the others were looking for, Duncan attempts to burn the children alive to leave no traces. Near the end of the film, Duncan stabs the leader, Eddie, to death and viciously attacks Shaun before attempting to rape her daughter out of spite.
  • The Breed (2001): Although the vampire Dr. Cross has genuinely good intentions, his pet Mad Scientist, the traitorous Dr. Fleming, has no such illusions. A human collaborator in the pocket of the vampires, Fleming manipulates his own allies while testing his evil pathogens on people in his laboratory, before selling out all humanity in the vampires' master plan: to use Fleming's virus to turn those who surrender into vampires and agonizingly wipe out all who resist. Fleming doesn't care how many people die, only caring about the vampires' promise for him to never know disease, weakness, or pain again-—which Dr. Cross gifts to him by opening his throat.
  • Brennus, Enemy of Rome: The titular Brennus is a bloodthirsty warlord who leads an army of barbarians through the early Roman Empire, causing bloodshed and devastation on a massive scale to satisfy his greed and lust for power. Routinely having civilians tortured and killed, Brennus promises Nissia that he will spare the town of Clusium if she agrees to marry him, only to reveal that he never had any intention of keeping his word. Personally responsible for the death of one of hero Quintus Fabius's brothers, Brennus conspires with Decius Vatinius in order to seize all of Rome's riches for himself, and cruelly mistreats Nissia as he tries to force himself upon her. After demanding a ransom of a thousand libras of gold in exchange of Rome's safety, Brennus has his men arbitrarily raise the price, and when the Romans finally turn the tables on him, he abandons his men to their fate, and kills Vatinius after the latter shows him an escape route.
  • Brick: Laura Dannon is a seemingly innocent upperclassman and potential Love Interest to Brendan Frye, but she is in truth a manipulative, ambitious puppet master. Laura stole and poisoned a brick of cocaine from the Pin, ruining his reputation as a drug lord when the cocaine sent several users into the hospital. Framing her own best friend Emily for the theft, Laura tricked the pregnant girl into signing her own death warrant by enraging Emily's boyfriend Tug into beating her to death. To completely eradicate her competition and tie up all loose ends, Laura uses Brendan to arrange a meeting between the Pin and Tug, then sparks conflict between the two that results in the deaths of half a dozen students in a Gang War. Having put Brendan himself in the crossfire to succeed in her plans, Laura's only recourse when she is exposed is to callously reveal to Brendan that Emily was pregnant with his child, Laura hoping that these cruel words haunt him for life as payback for stopping her schemes.
  • The Brides of Sodom: Lord Dionysus rules a clan of post-apocalyptic vampires, periodically ordering crops of humans captured and drained, or kept in a torture dungeon to be fed off of. After his top hunter Eros falls in love with a human, Samuel, Dionysus orders him placed in the dungeon to be his Sex Slave. Becoming interested in Samuel himself, Dionysus offers to make him one of his undead slaves, raping him when he refuses. When Eros and Samuel try and fail to escape his grasp, Dionysus pretends to welcome them back while secretly having a duo of witches kill the former while framing his sister Persephone. When Samuel and Persephone retrieve a spell book Dionysus stole from the witches, Dionysus retaliates by forcing them to watch as he tears the Samuel's brother's throat out.
  • Bridge of Dragons (1999): The evil General Ruechang is a man loyal only to power. Ruechang murders the good-hearted father of Princess Halo to take over his kingdom and intends on forcibly marrying Halo and fathering an heir out of her, ruthlessly abusing her throughout his tenure as ruler and likely intending on murdering her after she wears out her use to him. Viciously cracking down on any rebellion to his polluted rule, Ruechang regularly has resistance fighters slaughtered or imprisoned, cuts open the throat of one impertinent rebel after falsely promising him a fair duel, and eventually makes it a point to directly lead the charge towards the rebellion's base to massacre everyone—man, woman, and child, capable of fighting or not.
  • Brighton Rock: Pinkie Brown in The Film of the Book from 2010, is a cruel, 17-year-old sociopath who is seen committing murder by a young woman. With her unaware of his identity, and so she will not testify against him, Pinkie seduces and marries her, killing again to cover his tracks. When he realizes a journalist is on his trail, Pinkie decides his wife is a liability and tries to force her into a Suicide Pact where she will die and he skips out on his end. When said journalist and a member of Pinkie's gang attempt to save her, Pinkie simply tries to murder all of them.
  • Brimstone: "The Reverend" is a stern, misogynistic, religiously-obsessed man who uses the Bible to justify his mistreatment of women. After physically and psychologically abusing his wife Anna for many years, ultimately leading to her suicide, the Reverend begins to lust after his daughter Joanna, intending to force her to marry him. When a friendly bandit sheltered by Joanna tries to stop him, the Reverend shoots him in the face with a cattle gun before dragging his daughter to his chambers to beat and rape her. Joanna escapes and finds a new home in a brothel, where the Reverend tracks her down many years later in an attempt to beat her back into submission to him. Joanna fights back and escapes again, but not before the Reverend stabs one of her best friends to death. After Joanna marries a new husband and becomes a mother, the Reverend once again finds her and proceeds to stalk Joanna's family, slaughtering the livestock, trying to turn her daughter against her and murdering her husband by cutting open his stomach and strangling him with his own intestines. Joanna flees to her father-in-law's cabin in the mountains, during which journey the Reverend shoots and kills her young stepson. The Reverend proceeds to murder the old man as well before capturing, tying up, and beating both Joanna and her daughter, indicating that he intends to rape the little girl—his own granddaughter—as retribution for Joanna having spurned his perverted advances for so long.
  • Broil (2020): August Sinclair is The Patriarch of the wealthy Sinclair family. Under his leadership, August organized his family to kidnap dozens of victims to cannibalize in annual harvests and ripped out the tongue of December when he tries to leave the family. When he learns of June and December's plot to poison and usurp him on one harvest, August has Mickey and Luck, June's assistant and child, respectively, killed, and tricks the pair into consuming them. After informing them of this fact out of spite, August has both of them killed and eaten as the next course of the harvest. As part of the family's game night, August forces Dakota and Chance to fight to the death and tries to turn Sydney into a Sinclair by forcing him to kill Freddie, after which August tries to kill Sydney and his friends anyway.
  • Broken Arrow (1996): Major Vic "Deak" Deakins was a man with a 20 year career in the US Air Force. After being unhappy with being passed over for promotion by officers he considered his inferior, Deakins decided to steal some nuclear missiles and use them to extort money from the US government. While trying to steal the nukes from a training exercise, Deakins tries to murder his "friend", Captain Riley Hale. Mercenaries under Deakins's command murder some civilians who are near the drop zone where the nukes would be delivered, and later kill a US military team assigned to recover the lost nukes. Deakins tampers with the keypads on the nukes, so that they would detonate if anyone tries to deactivate them. Later in the film, Deakins kills Pritchett, the man financing this operation, for annoying him with his complaining and comments that this is the first person he has ever killed face to face and doesn't see what the big deal is. Near the end of the film, after Hale destroys the helicopter, Deakins was planning on his using to escape the blast radius, Deakins decides to set off the nuke anyway and attempts to kill hundreds of thousands of people, solely out of spite.
  • Bronx Warriors series:
    • 1990: The Bronx Warriors: Hammer the Exterminator is a mercenary hired by the Manhattan Corporation to capture, and later eliminate, Anne after she runs away to the Bronx. Coming into confrontation with the Riders gang, Anne's rescuers, he kills two of its members and begins paying off other members to turn on one another. In an attempt to cause a war between the Riders and the Ogres, Hammer kills a member of The Ogres and frames Trash for the murder. At the film's climax, Hammer, deciding to Leave No Survivors, attacks a festival full of people, having his men burn everyone in sight alive.
    • Escape 2000: Floyd Wengler is a mercenary tasked with removing the population of the Bronx so the General Construction Corporation can gentrify it. To do so, he institutes a policy of genocide, with the victims either being tricked into voluntarily coming via lies of reaccommodation in New Mexico or simply being gunned down in their own homes. After Trash escapes a building's demolition and becomes hero of the resistance, Wengler tries to lure him and his gang to their deaths via civilians with bombs attached to them. After the resistance kidnaps President Clark, Wengler has his goons track them to their hideout, knowingly getting them killed, to get his armies a pathway to the base. When he gets there, he leads a total massacre, executing Clark so the company Vice President Hoffman can take over and pay him more] The battle ends up going south for his side, so Wengler tries to escape, gunning down any friend or foe in his way. Despite working for a faction genuinely wishing to help New York City, Wengler never pretends to be anything but Only in It for the Money.
  • Brooklyn Tide: Jonathan Clay, Special Agent Jonathan Corbin's disgraced former partner in the FBI, desires revenge for the latter putting him in prison. To this end, Clay manipulates Agent Samantha Vera into being his infiltrator; has Corbin's supervisor, Agent Francesco, attacked; and has a supposed cyber weapon in Francesco's possession stolen. Intending to cause a nuclear meltdown using the device, Clay has Vera inject Corbin with potassium cyanide while she takes the device on his behalf. When Corbin confronts Vera over her betrayal, Clay stabs her from behind, before eventually trying to have his subordinate, Zero, shoot Corbin during their final confrontation.
  • The Brotherhood of Satan: Doc Duncan is the leader of the titular cult of elderly men and women. For many centuries, he and his followers have been brainwashing children into joining his coven, with the intention of possessing their bodies to extend his life after killing their families with an inanimate object that he brought to life through magic. The first thing he does in the film is crush a family underneath a tank while they're in their car. Next, he uses a child's doll to kill the parents of two children before spiriting the children away. When Alice comes in to meet with the Brotherhood, he sends the spirit of their baptized grandchild to Hell before ordering his followers to beat her to death. Duncan has Mike killed as he tries to snap his son out of a trance. Once he's gathered all the children needed for the members to possess, he orders each of his followers—and himself—killed with burning swords, after which they successfully hijack the bodies of the children.
  • Brotherhood of the Wolf:
    • Jean-François de Morangias appears to be a foppish, crippled aristocrat, but is in reality a deadly enforcer for an evil cult. After returning from Africa, Jean-François brought with him a lion that he controls and keeps in a state of constant agony, using it to slaughter people while the poor creature is in so much pain it can't control itself. Jean-François also reveals a rather perverse lust towards his sister Marianne and later rapes her.
    • Henri Sardis is a rogue priest who secretly leads the Brotherhood of the Wolf. Disgusted at the advances of The Enlightenment, Sardis has the Beast sent out to terrorize the countryside of Gévaudan. Hundreds are killed in the resulting carnage, with Sardis planning to lead a revolution and overthrow the kingdom of France to establish his own theocracy.
  • The Brothers Grimm: The Mirror Queen was once a beautiful and vain queen who left her people to die of the plague; prior to this, the queen tortured and murdered numerous people for Black Magic to grant her immortality. Failing to get eternal youth, she spent centuries rotting away from age and the plague before brainwashing an innocent huntsman into becoming her werewolf slave, and began kidnapping young girls via macabre versions of fairy tales, burying them alive to take their blood for her youth and kills the soldiers investigating these kidnappings. When one child is saved, the Mirror Queen takes the huntsman's daughter Angelika as a substitute. When the Grimm brothers confront the queen, she magically forces the brothers into a knife fight, brainwashes a mortally wounded Wil, and mocks Jakob about his failure to save his sister as a child.
  • The Brute and the Beast (aka Massacre Time) (1966): Jason Scott, Jr. is a sadistic, strutting brat who, having grown up spoiled by his spineless land baron father, sees it as his right to kill people for sport. "Junior" opens the film hunting a live captive on horseback for sport, watching with perverse pleasure as his dogs tear the man apart; goes on to kill the teenage son of a family his father is running out for a giggle; and murders an entire family in the dead of night on horseback. Junior whips the protagonist Tom Corbett to bloody pieces when he tries appealing to Junior's father; kills Tom's harmless old housemaid later out of spite; and, after years of abusing and controlling his own father, Junior finally murders him as well. When Tom comes in slaughtering all of Junior's men, Junior tells his last minion he'll cover his back before running for the hills the second the goon leaves. Even when it's revealed Tom is his own half-brother through their father, Junior tries to murder Tom seconds after he'd pitifully begged Tom not to do the exact same thing.
  • Brute Corps (1971): Wicks is a psychopathic rapist who proves himself the worst of the mercenaries. A psychopath who wants to have as much excitement as possible before his inevitable death, Wicks has committed several war crimes in the past, which include murdering a pregnant woman, even saving an article of the incident as a cherished memory. Molesting any woman he comes across, Wicks takes the hippie Terry for himself to be his Sex Slave, willing to kill his own allies to keep her for himself. After raping Terry, he lets her go, only to allow the mercenaries to gang-rape her, ultimately planning to degrade Terry's mental state so that she will become his pet forever.
  • Brute Force (1947): Captain Munsey is a cruel sadist who psychologically and physically tortures the prisoners under his care, subjecting them to beatings and more to obtain information. When one man refuses to talk due to parole, Munsey manipulates another prisoner into suicide to have parole hearings revoked. When a riot becomes inevitable, Munsey has no hesitation in trying to simply gun down as many prisoners as he can, refusing to even recognize any of the men as human beings.
  • The Buffalo Boys (2018):
    • Captain Van Trach is the head of the Dutch forces in the setting. Having murdered the heroes' father, the Sultan, Van Trach sets up a dictatorship where the Javanese are worked as slaves, branded as his property and killed for little reason. When he discovers the village leader trying to protect his daughter, Van Trach makes the man choose whether his daughter or father will be executed and then has the man killed as a message anyways. Van Trach also takes women as sex slaves, abusing them and murdering them if they try to escape. When the heroes return to resist him, Van Trach has the town attacked, with many killed and raped, willing to do whatever it takes to continue his reign.
    • Drost, the right-hand man of Van Trach, is introduced by transporting several slaves of Van Trach. However, he displays his true cruelty when trying to torture unregistered citizens—including women and children—by branding them, and shoots one of the children who escaped from his cruelty. Personally executing a village chief, Drost then captures the heroes to be tortured and interrogated by Van Trach. When the heroes escaped and retreated to a farmhouse, Drost then, under Van Trach's orders, burns the farmhouse and shoots those inside, while letting his men kill and rape all of the innocent villagers, all while watching the burned farmhouse with an extreme apathy.
  • Bullet in the Head: Paul is part of a trio of delinquents who go to war-torn Vietnam to escape arrest. Witnessing the brutality of the war, Paul decides that those with the best guns control the world, immediately robbing and pistol whipping a store clerk upon getting his first gun. Over the course of the film, Paul is consumed by Gold Fever, gunning down anybody who stands in the way of him and his gold, including threatening his supposed friends. After the trio are captured by the Viet Cong, Paul immediately sells out the CIA agents he got the gold from before leaving his allies to be tortured to death in the prison camp. In his escape, Paul personally shoots Frankie in the head, permanently brain damaging him to the point of needing a Mercy Kill, and massacres a bunch of villagers to steal a boat. Years later, when Ben confronts Paul for revenge, he tries to force his nemesis to destroy Frankie's skull just to psychologically torment him.
  • Bulletproof (1988):
    • Colonel Kartiff is a Libyan communist seeking to sell the Thunderblast, an impenetrable tank, to the Russians for a hefty profit. Wiping out a small mountain town and keeping the few survivors imprisoned and subjected to weeks of abuse and starvation, Kartiff sends his right-hand man Pantaro to seize the Thunderblast as it's being transported across the border and slaughter nearly everyone accompanying it. Kartiff redirects his attentions to the woman Devon after she's captured, degrading her, having her comrades killed before her eyes, and raping her himself after she resists his advances, with the heavy implication he's had other victims before.
    • General Pantaro is a smug, perpetually-grinning psychopath who seems to only be following Kartiff and fellow terrorist Brogrado for a chance to wipe as many American soldiers out as he can. Massacring a border patrol and personally wiping out the majority of the squad sent to transport the Thunderblast, Pantaro eagerly takes any chance he can to execute whomever he can at Kartiff's word and terrorizes several of the prisoners himself, later attempting to burn all the prisoners alive himself and furiously gunning many of them down as they attempt to flee.
  • Bulletproof Monk: Strucker is a vile former SS officer seeking the mystical scroll so he can use it to commit worldwide genocide on anyone he deems inferior. First seen wiping out a temple of peaceful monks to get the scroll, Strucker chases the nameless Monk for 60 years to get the scroll from him, threatening to kill his own granddaughter for failing to acquire it. After capturing and torturing another group of monks, Strucker reveals a device with which he intends to agonizingly extract the contents of the scroll from the nameless Monk's mind, demonstrating its effects by torturing a monk who helped him to death. Later, Strucker threatens to murder the Monk's friend Kar to get the last verse of the scroll and, when the Monk saves his life, spitefully attempts to drag the Monk with him to his death.
  • Bullet to the Head: Keegan is an arrogant murderer who opens the film killing the partner of Jimmy Bobo. A killer who revels in bloodshed for the sake of his pride, Keegan regularly kills all in his path for jobs, killing a mobster and everyone with him. When Jimmy makes it personal between them by outsmarting Keegan, Keegan kidnaps his daughter, brutalizing or killing those with her, so he might murder her if Jimmy doesn't give him a fight. Upon his employer Morel simply letting Jimmy go in a trade, Keegan murders him so he might engage Jimmy in a fight.
  • Bullet Train: "The Hornet" is a particularly vicious assassin who lacks the standards her contemporaries hold,, and is much viler than in Kōtarō Isaka's original novel. Specializing in "Boomslang Venom," which agonizingly kills people as they bleed from their orifices, Hornet is shown to target a doctor; a Cartel wedding, indiscriminately murdering Cartel members and their family members, including "the Wolf's" innocent wife; and kills a train hostess to steal her uniform. Confronting "Ladybug", Hornet is smugly delighted at the thought of poisoning him, taunting him all the while.
  • Critical Dissonance: The movie did not review particularly well, holding a 53% Rotten score from professional reviewers on Rotten Tomatoes.
  • The Bunnyman trilogy:
    • First two films: Joe is the apparent head of his cannibalistic family's activities, as well as The Corrupter and boss of the titular Bunnyman killer, real name Michael. Hobbies including torturing or raping their victims to death; when the Bunnyman turns to Joe for help, Joe relentlessly mocks and bullies him for his failures, including the deaths of his family. Joe is shown to be the one who planned the massacre of a school bus full of children, and runs a shop where he secretly sells the meat of his victims to unwitting customers. When he has two sisters abducted, Joe agrees to let them go if the older sister fetches three more victims for him; the first is stuffed into a barrel with nails in its side before they are pushed down a hill, while he holds sexual threats over one who he took a liking too. When he plans to rape his remaining captives, including the two sisters, Joe is confronted by the Sheriff about the murder of two deputies. After wounding the sheriff, Joe proceeds to crush the man's head in while sticking his thumbs in the sheriff's eyes before being fatally shot himself.
    • Vengeance: John is one of a duo of psychopathic brothers along with his brother Carl. Disturbed sadists in their youth, the two brothers are introduced in a flashback when they bullied and burned a younger kid named Michael alive, and left him for dead before Michael was saved by their kindhearted handicapped brother Jacob. As the two brothers grew up, they became a pair of killers of their own. When they reunite with Michael, now the Bunnyman killer, they plan on capitalizing off of him by creating a haunted house attraction to lure in more victims; they also send and take Michael on a number outings to collect more victims, one of which included a child. John personally kills two women, using their skeletons as part of the attraction. When their plans ultimate fall flat, John plans to go their separate ways, as well as to kill and throw Michael and Jacob under the bus, blaming Jacob for their failings. While Carl shows that he cares about Jacob, John is openly abusive to Jacob, culminating in him shooting and killing Jacob without remorse.
  • Bunraku:
    • Nicola "the Woodcutter" is a ruthless gang lord who uses philosophical musings to undercut his sadistic love for fighting and killing. Nicola clawed his way to become the "most powerful man East of the Atlantic" by slaughtering all of his rivals and decimating any rebellions against his rule, which plunged his realm into a Wretched Hive. Using his elite guard known as the "Killers"—particularly Number 2—Nicola oversees routine murder, extortion and forced prostitution of dozens of women, all while encouraging his Killers to backstab and murder one another for his favor. Having forced Alexandra into being his concubine under threat of murdering her lover, Nicola plans to force her to bear him an heir lest he kill her. Nicola is also revealed to be the murderer of the Drifter's father, and when he's finally confronted by the Drifter, Nicola turns their fight into a torture session while proclaiming that the only thing that matters in life is power and cruelty.
    • The sinister Killer No. 2 is the head of Nicola's Nine Killers, as well as the man running the day-to-day affairs of the Red Suits, the card-carrying mafia that runs the entire city. On his order, innocents are forced to sign contracts in their own blood, or snatched off the streets for unspeakable fates, all while No. 2 personally slaughters anyone who could pose a threat to the Woodcutter's rule by the dozens. All the while, No. 2 kills his own men left and right for any reason he can think of, slitting their throats and gouging out their eyes just for inconveniencing him. At one point, No. 2 murders the uncle of one of the film's heroes, then orders the man's daughter held captive for his later pleasure.
  • Burning Paradise (1994): Lord Kung, warden of the Red Lotus Temple, is a horrifying, hedonistic sadist who has turned the temple into his own personal den of torture. Kung forces his prisoners into virtual slavery and sadistically kills them—be it through his traps, as subjects in duels to the death, or to paint with their blood—regularly enough to bloat the caves underneath the temple with hundreds of corpses, even decorating his temple with the bodies and bones of those who have transgressed him. Kung also rapes his own concubines for pleasure, murdering those he tires of and setting up their bodies as trophies and terrorizing his latest—Chou Chou—by ripping off the head of a servant to break her first before raping her on the spot, even promising to turn her over to the pleasure of his soldiers once he's tired of using her further. Kung gleefully drags everyone around him into the hell he's turned the temple into, with even his own loyal servants knowing they'll never be able to escape his cruel whims.
  • The Burrowers: The psychopathic Henry Victor is a cruel, ignorant, sadistic Cavalry Officer who leads the hunt to find the missing Stewart family. When one native proves to be reluctant to talk, Victor has him horrifically tortured. At the end of the film, Victor returns to kill the only Ute Indians who know how to kill the monstrous Burrowers, hanging an innocent Native woman named Faith and unnecessarily amputating one man's leg, resulting in his own death to Victor's apathy. Victor ends the film having his men preparing to butcher the Ute tribe without a flicker of remorse, reflecting the evils of Manifest Destiny in one nasty package.
  • The Butchering (2015): Will Gilbert and Kaitlin are attempting to use the legend of murderer Tommy Gilbert to their own ends. First murdering one survivor of Gilbert's rampage and her sister, the two begin targeting and killing to keep the legend going, all for their own benefit and satisfaction, even killing their supposed friends. Targeting Ryan, the only other survivor, and his niece Julie, the two torture Julie, murdering her former boyfriend and even their other partner in the endeavor before trying to kill whoever is connected to them to get away with it.
  • The Butler: Thomas Westfall is an ill-tempered young cotton plantation owner who uses his workers like slaves. Deciding to rape the mother of Cecil Gaines—implied to do so regularly with attractive female workers—Thomas then shoots Cecil's father dead for protesting, demanding his other farmhands carry on lest he kill them as well.
  • The Bye Bye Man: The Bye Bye Man is a sadistic entity who haunts anyone who learns his name, driving them to insanity and eventually causing them to murder others. After forcing a teenager to kill several people, the Bye Bye Man began terrorizing a reporter and is implied to have driven him to murder eight people before killing himself. After Elliot and his friends learn the Bye Bye Man's name, he slowly drives them insane, causing one to be hit by a train and framing Elliot for the death, and later makes a woman kill her children before causing her death as well. The Bye Bye Man then causes the friends to attack one another and tricks Elliot into killing his own girlfriend. The Bye Bye Man then taunts Elliot with his intent to kill his family, and ends the movie moving on to another victim.
  • Byzantium: Captain Ruthven is the film's human antagonist, and a sadistic pimp when not fighting in The Napoleonic Wars. Ruthven preys on young women by kidnapping them and forcing them into prostitution, with a bit of rape as his own personal compensation, a fate which befalls a young girl named Clara. Ruthven considers her his "favorite" prostitute, having her gang-raped by his upper class associates and regularly violating and beating her himself. After she gives birth to her daughter Eleanor, Ruthven is discovered to be dying of syphilis and that he discovered the existence of vampires; he did so during the war when he abandoned his kindhearted friend Darvell to die, robbing him and revealing his hatred for the man. Ruthven plans on joining the vampire Brethren to escape death, but is cheated out of immortality by Clara, who became a vampire instead. In retribution, Ruthven rapes the teenage Eleanor to spite Clara; not only does he deliberately pass on his syphilis to her, but it's also implied that Eleanor could be he own daughter.

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